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Thursday, November 12, 2020, 19:15
Seven dead as Typhoon Vamco triggers Manila's worst floods in years
By Reuters
Thursday, November 12, 2020, 19:15 By Reuters

A motorcycle carrying a pig crosses a flooded road in Albay province, central Philippines due to Typhoon Vamco on Nov 12, 2020. (PHOTO / AFP)

MANILA - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Thursday ordered government agencies to hasten relief efforts after a powerful typhoon killed at least seven people and unleashed some of the worst flooding in years in the capital Manila.

Rest assured, the government will not leave anybody behind.

Rodrigo Duterte, Philippine president

Duterte cut short his attendance of a virtual meeting of Southeast Asian leaders to inspect the damage from Typhoon Vamco, moments after a speech during which he urged his counterparts to urgently combat the effects of climate change.

The typhoon, the eighth to hit the Philippines in the past two months and 21st of the year, forced residents to scramble onto rooftops to await rescue after tens of thousands of homes were submerged.

This Nov 12, 2020 AFP graphic shows the path of Typhoon Vamco.

Those killed across the main island of Luzon, home to half of the country's 108 million population, included people who drowned, an elderly man hit by a tree and three workers crushed when a warehouse collapsed.

The latest typhoon, which has also left four missing, struck areas still reeling from Goni, the most powerful typhoon in the world this year, which killed 25 people and destroyed thousands of homes earlier this month.

READ MORE: World's strongest typhoon pummels Philippines, killing four

Nearly three million households in and around Manila were without power as people waded through waist-high floods, carrying valuables and pets

"Rest assured, the government will not leave anybody behind," Duterte said in a national address, pledging shelter, relief goods, financial aid and counselling.

Nearly 200,000 people were evacuated before Vamco arrived late on Wednesday packing winds of 155 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 255 kph. It has since weakened and exited the mainland.

Duterte told Southeast Asian leaders the devastation of recent weeks was "a stark reminder of the urgency of collective action to combat the effects of climate change".

'Overwhelming'

Nearly three million households in and around Manila were without power as people waded through waist-high floods, carrying valuables and pets.

The coast guard swam through brown floodwater as high as electricity poles in some areas, while rescue workers used rubber boats and makeshift floats to move children and the elderly to safety. 

Big waves and strong winds in Manila Bay budged a tanker, damaging a bridge.

A man stands on the a roof as floods continue to rise in Marikina, Philippines due to Typhoon Vamco on Nov 12, 2020. (PHOTO / AP)

In some suburbs east of Manila, residents took refuge atop flooded homes.

"The flood reached the entire second floor of our house. For more than eight hours, we stayed at our neighbor's house," call center worker Albert Rano, 35, told Reuters.

"Aside from some clothes and laptops, nothing is left."

Roughly 40,000 homes had either been fully or partially submerged in the Marikina area, a situation its mayor, Marcelino Teodoro, said was "overwhelming"

The typhoons have battered the Philippines as it faces an uphill struggle to breathe life into its withering economy while keeping coronavirus infections under control.

Roughly 40,000 homes had either been fully or partially submerged in the Marikina area, a situation its mayor, Marcelino Teodoro, said was "overwhelming" and the worst since a typhoon flooded large swathes of the capital in 2009.

"The local government cannot handle this," Teodoro told DZMM radio, requesting motorised boats and airlifts.

Residents posted images on social media of flooded homes and the disaster agency said parts of 36 cities and towns were inundated.

Flights and mass transit in Manila were suspended and port operations stopped. Government work was halted and financial markets shut.

Vamco was headed towards Vietnam, where devastating floods and mudslides over the past month have killed at least 160 people in central areas.

The Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,600 islands, experiences around 20 tropical storms a year that often continue on their track to hit Vietnam and China.

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