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Toll of dead, missing from Philippine typhoon rises to 48

The mangled roof of a gas station is seen in the village of Palamis in the town of Alaminos, Pangasinan province northern Luzon on May 8, 2009 after typhoon Chan-hom hit the province May 7. At least 25 people were killed and thousands displaced overnight as Typhoon Chan-hom raked the northern Philippines, officials said May 8. The typhoon blew out into the Philippine Sea off the northeast coast of Luzon island early Friday after unleashing landslides, floods, and power cuts across the north of the country. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) May 10, 2009
The toll of casualties from Typhoon Chan-hom in the Philippines rose to 36 dead, 12 missing and 40 injured, the government said Sunday.

The typhoon has also left over 4,400 people still housed in nine evacuation centres in the northern part of the country after hitting the Philippines last week, the civil defence office said in a statement.

Thirty-three villages mostly in the northern part of the main island of Luzon still remained flooded but power had largely been restored in affected areas.

The fatalities were mostly buried in landslides in mountainous areas, hit by falling debris at the height of the storm or drowned in overflowing rivers, the civil defence office said.

Most of the missing were from small boats that capsized during the typhoon, it added.

Food and other forms of assistance were rushed to typhoon-hit areas where more than 21,000 houses were damaged or destroyed, the office said.

The typhoon blew out into the Philippine Sea off the northeast coast of Luzon island early Friday.

It hit just days after Typhoon Kujira wreaked havoc across a swathe of the Philippines, leaving at least 27 people dead and 54,000 people homeless.

Around 20 typhoons hit the country every year.

earlier related report
Aid rushed to 64,000 displaced by Philippine typhoon
Food, medicine and housing materials were being rushed Saturday to tens of thousands of people displaced by a typhoon that lashed the northern Philippines, rescuers said.

The death toll from Typhoon Chan-hom, the second typhoon to hit the country in a week, rose to 27 as more of the affected areas restored downed power and communication lines.

At least 47 tonnes of rice were sent to the region around the cape of Bolinao, where 12 people died as the typhoon wrecked homes and toppled power lines, the civil defence office said in a statement.

Electricity was being slowly restored in the area, it added.

Relief goods were also being taken to the neighbouring province of Zambales and to the mountain region around Kiangan town, where 12 people were killed by landslides, it added.

One man died of a heart attack in the city of Olongapao as it was also rocked by landslides.

Relief agencies reported two new deaths Saturday -- a woman drowned when a boat capsized while crossing a river near Santa Fe town, while a four year-old girl drowned in Balanga city west of Manila.

The typhoon blew out into the Philippine Sea off the northeast coast of Luzon island early Friday after unleashing landslides, floods, and power cuts across the north of the country.

It destroyed more than 7,000 houses and the strong winds and flooding displaced more than 64,000 people, the government said.

Chan-hom hit just days after Typhoon Kujira wreaked havoc across a swathe of the Philippines, leaving at least 27 people dead and 54,000 people homeless.

Around 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, some causing massive death and destruction.

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Philippines typhoon kills 27, new storm approaches: govt
Manila (AFP) May 6, 2009
The death toll from a typhoon that lashed the Philippines rose to 27, with over 54,000 people left homeless, the government said Wednesday, as they warned of a new storm gathering in the South China Sea. State weather forecasts said Typhoon Kujira has now blown out of the Philippines after dumping heavy rains and causing floods and landslides in the eastern Bicol region at the weekend. ... read more







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