Luzon cleans up after Typhoon Santi

Agence France-Presse

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The military and civilian relief workers struggled to clear roads of toppled trees and power pylons as they rushed to restore vital lifelines

CLEANUP. Workers clear debris brought about Typhoon Santi (Nari) at a street in Manila, Philippines, 12 October 2013. EPA/Francis Malasig

MANILA, Philippines – A major clean-up operation was under way in Luzon on Sunday, October 13 after Typhoon Santi (international codename Nari) pounded the archipelago’s north, leaving 13 dead.

The military, along with civilian relief workers, struggled to clear roads of toppled trees and power pylons as they rushed to restore vital lifelines wrecked by Saturday’s (October 12) storm.

“The general situation is getting better, but it would take some time to clear the roads of fallen trees and (electrical) posts,” civil defense office spokesman Reynaldo Balido told Agence France-Presse.

He said power and telecommunication facilities had been restored in affected areas, although some cities and towns in five provinces on Luzon, the country’s most populous island, were without electricity.

Typhoon Santi, the 19th storm to hit the disaster-prone country, tore into the country’s northeast coast early Saturday and cut a westward path through the farming regions of Luzon.

Thirteen people were killed as the storm ripped off roofs of homes and buildings, toppling trees and triggering flash floods and landslides before blowing away into the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea).

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said Sunday morning that some agricultural areas remained inundated, although the waters were subsiding.

“The sun is already out, and we should be able to normalize in a few days,” Balido said.

Many of the more than 43,000 people displaced by the storm had also begun returning home as the government lifted all storm warnings there, he said.

However, the state weather bureau issued a warning for the country’s east. It said Typhoon Wipha was 1,460 kilometers (900 miles) away and could reach Philippine seas by Monday, October 14. It will be given the codename Tino once it enters the Philippine Area of Responsibility.

The bureau added that Wipha was expected to move northward and not directly hit the Philippines but Balido said authorities were not taking any chances.

“We will remain on alert, and continue to take precautions,” he said.

The Philippines are hit by some 20 typhoons each year.

Last month, heavy monsoon rains worsened by Typhoon Usagi also pounded Luzon, unleashing deadly floods that killed 30. – Rappler.com

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