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Typhoon shuts down Philippine capital, kills 11

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The first typhoon of the Philippines' brutal rainy season shut down the nation's capital on Wednesday, killing at least 11 people across the country and forcing hundreds of thousands to evacuate.

Ferocious winds from Typhoon Rammasun tore roofs off houses, overturned cars and ripped trees out of the ground in the megacity of Manila, as well as remote fishing villages hundreds of kilometres away.

Typhoon Rammasun
Typhoon Rammasun
, AFP

"I thought I was going to die. I went out to look for gasoline in case we needed to evacuate, but it was a mistake," said tricycle driver Pedro Rojas, 35, as he nursed a cut head while sheltering at a town hall on the outskirts of Manila.

"My tricycle rolled over twice after I slammed into sheets of rain. It was like hitting a wall... huge tin roofings were flying everywhere."

Falling trees, poles and walls killed at least 11 people across the northern parts of the Philippines that Rammasun swept over with wind gusts approaching 200 kilometres (120 miles) an hour, authorities said.

The national disaster management council reported five fatalities, while local authorities confirmed the six others to AFP.

One of those was a rescue worker who died in the capital when a government building collapsed on him, while falling trees killed two elderly people in rural areas of a province neighbouring Manila.

Motorists speed past fallen trees along a highway as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July ...
Motorists speed past fallen trees along a highway as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16, 2014
Ted Aljibe, AFP

Rammasun, which in Thai means "God of Thunder", tore in from the Pacific Ocean with wind gusts of about 250 kilometres an hour and smashed into poor fishing communities in the east of the archipelago on Tuesday night.

It weakened slightly as it cut across the main island of Luzon and exited into the South China Sea on Wednesday afternoon. Weather forecasters warned it may pick up strength again as it tracks towards southern China.

The eye of the storm just missed Manila, home to more than 12 million people, but the huge winds and bursts of heavy rain brought the city to a virtual standstill.

Power in many areas, including the business district of Makati, was cut just after dawn as branches were torn off trees and electricity lines snapped.

Manila's power distributor, Meralco, said 90 percent of its customers had lost electricity, with similar problems reported in neighbouring provinces.

Meralco did not give a timeframe for when power would be restored, and millions of people were left to struggle in hot and humid weather without electricity throughout the day.

- Homes destroyed -

The winds also tore down shanty homes in slum areas where hundreds of thousands of people live along Manila Bay.

"Our house was destroyed and we lost many of our belongings," housewife Dayang Bansuan said as she rested in a school that had been turned into an evacuation centre for people living in the coastal Manila slums.

Cars are pinned downed by uprooted trees as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16  2014
Cars are pinned downed by uprooted trees as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16, 2014
Ted Aljibe, AFP

"We fled our home just before dawn when the water started rising up to our ankles. I was really frightened, they (neighbours) were saying the winds were getting stronger. They were telling us to evacuate."

Across the country, about 350,000 people fled their homes and sheltered in evacuation centres, according to the disaster management council.

The Philippines is hit by about 20 major storms a year, many of them deadly. The Southeast Asian archipelago is often the first major landmass to be struck after storms build above the warm Pacific Ocean waters.

Rammasun was the first typhoon to make landfall since this year's rainy season began in June.

It was also the first major storm since Super Typhoon Haiyan devastated the eastern islands of Samar and Leyte in November last year, killing up to 7,300 people in one of the Philippines' worst natural disasters.

Those areas felt only light rain and winds on Tuesday and Wednesday, but that was enough to send panic through some Haiyan survivors who are still struggling to rebuild their communities.

"I feared we were going to relive our nightmare, when we had to swim for our lives," said fisherman Alfredo Cojas, 49, who left his shanty home in the Leyte capital of Tacloban on Tuesday for an evacuation centre.

"This typhoon wasn't that strong, but we have a phobia about these things now."

The first typhoon of the Philippines’ brutal rainy season shut down the nation’s capital on Wednesday, killing at least 11 people across the country and forcing hundreds of thousands to evacuate.

Ferocious winds from Typhoon Rammasun tore roofs off houses, overturned cars and ripped trees out of the ground in the megacity of Manila, as well as remote fishing villages hundreds of kilometres away.

Typhoon Rammasun

Typhoon Rammasun
, AFP

“I thought I was going to die. I went out to look for gasoline in case we needed to evacuate, but it was a mistake,” said tricycle driver Pedro Rojas, 35, as he nursed a cut head while sheltering at a town hall on the outskirts of Manila.

“My tricycle rolled over twice after I slammed into sheets of rain. It was like hitting a wall… huge tin roofings were flying everywhere.”

Falling trees, poles and walls killed at least 11 people across the northern parts of the Philippines that Rammasun swept over with wind gusts approaching 200 kilometres (120 miles) an hour, authorities said.

The national disaster management council reported five fatalities, while local authorities confirmed the six others to AFP.

One of those was a rescue worker who died in the capital when a government building collapsed on him, while falling trees killed two elderly people in rural areas of a province neighbouring Manila.

Motorists speed past fallen trees along a highway as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July ...

Motorists speed past fallen trees along a highway as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16, 2014
Ted Aljibe, AFP

Rammasun, which in Thai means “God of Thunder”, tore in from the Pacific Ocean with wind gusts of about 250 kilometres an hour and smashed into poor fishing communities in the east of the archipelago on Tuesday night.

It weakened slightly as it cut across the main island of Luzon and exited into the South China Sea on Wednesday afternoon. Weather forecasters warned it may pick up strength again as it tracks towards southern China.

The eye of the storm just missed Manila, home to more than 12 million people, but the huge winds and bursts of heavy rain brought the city to a virtual standstill.

Power in many areas, including the business district of Makati, was cut just after dawn as branches were torn off trees and electricity lines snapped.

Manila’s power distributor, Meralco, said 90 percent of its customers had lost electricity, with similar problems reported in neighbouring provinces.

Meralco did not give a timeframe for when power would be restored, and millions of people were left to struggle in hot and humid weather without electricity throughout the day.

– Homes destroyed –

The winds also tore down shanty homes in slum areas where hundreds of thousands of people live along Manila Bay.

“Our house was destroyed and we lost many of our belongings,” housewife Dayang Bansuan said as she rested in a school that had been turned into an evacuation centre for people living in the coastal Manila slums.

Cars are pinned downed by uprooted trees as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16  2014

Cars are pinned downed by uprooted trees as Typhoon Rammasun barrels across Manila on July 16, 2014
Ted Aljibe, AFP

“We fled our home just before dawn when the water started rising up to our ankles. I was really frightened, they (neighbours) were saying the winds were getting stronger. They were telling us to evacuate.”

Across the country, about 350,000 people fled their homes and sheltered in evacuation centres, according to the disaster management council.

The Philippines is hit by about 20 major storms a year, many of them deadly. The Southeast Asian archipelago is often the first major landmass to be struck after storms build above the warm Pacific Ocean waters.

Rammasun was the first typhoon to make landfall since this year’s rainy season began in June.

It was also the first major storm since Super Typhoon Haiyan devastated the eastern islands of Samar and Leyte in November last year, killing up to 7,300 people in one of the Philippines’ worst natural disasters.

Those areas felt only light rain and winds on Tuesday and Wednesday, but that was enough to send panic through some Haiyan survivors who are still struggling to rebuild their communities.

“I feared we were going to relive our nightmare, when we had to swim for our lives,” said fisherman Alfredo Cojas, 49, who left his shanty home in the Leyte capital of Tacloban on Tuesday for an evacuation centre.

“This typhoon wasn’t that strong, but we have a phobia about these things now.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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