Papal visit to Leyte could be a rainy affair

Agence France-Presse

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Papal visit to Leyte could be a rainy affair
A low pressure area currently over the Pacific Ocean could hit Leyte in time for the papal visit on January 17

MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines watched nervously on Sunday, January 11, as a low pressure area threatened Leyte, where Pope Francis will visit this week on his tour of the fervently Catholic nation.

The country’s weather bureau said a low pressure area currently over the Pacific Ocean is on course for Leyte, touted as one of the highlights of the pontiff’s 4-day visit, and could develop into a storm by the time it enters Philippine waters on Thursday, January 15.

Leyte was the province worst hit by Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) in November 2013, and suffered landslides and floods late last year wrought by tropical storm Jangmi (Seniang).

“Part of contingency planning are possible inclement scenarios… options are being developed,” presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma from the papal visit organizing committee told Agence France-Presse.

Asked if canceling the events on Leyte island on January 17 was an option, Coloma said: “It’s best to wait until the (weather disturbance) enters the Philippines before making specific contingency plans.”

In a best-case scenario, the low pressure area would turn northwards and spare the country, but there is also an equal chance it will intensify into a storm, state weather forecaster Alvin Pura told Agence France-Presse.

“This may hit the Eastern Visayas and bring rains to the pope’s events,” he said, referring to the island chain in which Leyte sits.

Pura could not immediately say how much rain was possible on Leyte if the storm developed and hit the island.

During the last week of 2014, the Eastern Visayas were caught off guard when a storm bearing relatively weak winds brought heavy rains, triggering flash floods and landslides that killed 54 people.

The pontiff, who arrives in the country on Thursday, will be in Leyte on Saturday, January 17, to give a mass at the airport in Tacloban, ground zero for Yolanda, and have lunch with storm survivors in nearby Palo town.

The weather disturbance was unlikely to affect another mass in Manila the day after, where millions are expected to attend, Pura said.

Partly cloudy skies and cool weather are expected in the capital on that day, he said.

The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 typhoons per year, many of them deadly.

Haiyan, the strongest typhoon to hit land with 230-kilometer (143-mile) per hour winds, brought tsunami like waves to the central Philippines, wiping out entire towns and leaving more than 7,350 people dead or missing. – Rappler.com

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