Filipinos on bicycles cross a flooded street in Marikina city, east of Manila yesterday.

DPA/Manila

Typhoon Kalmaegi killed eight people and displaced nearly 18,000 people as it battered the northern Philippines on the weekend, the national disaster relief agency said yesterday. 

More than a dozen ferry trips and nearly 50 domestic flights were cancelled as the storm hit Sunday, cutting off electricity in eight northern provinces. 

Kalmaegi was packing maximum winds of 120 kilometres per hour and gusts of up to 150 kph, the weather bureau said. 

Schools were closed in Manila and northern provinces, where 17,633 people were forced to flee their homes, the national disaster relief agency said. 

At least eight people died when a ferry sank Saturday evening in rough seas off the eastern province of Leyte, the navy said. 

Three bodies were recovered shortly after the accident, five more were retrieved yesterday by navy ships, navy Lieutenant Commander Marineth Domingo said.

“The five cadavers included an infant girl,” she said.  Rescuers saved 113 people from the boat that was en route to the southern city of Surigao. 

In Manila, 15 crew members were rescued from a docked vessel that capsized after being battered by strong winds and big waves on Sunday evening, the Office of Civil Defence said. 

The ship was undergoing repairs at the Manila port. Seven of the crew members boarded a life raft, while the rest swam towards the shore, the office said. 

Kalmaegi left some roads and bridges impassable in the northern Philippines, officials said. 

The weather bureau said the typhoon, which blew out of the Philippines yesterday, would bring more trailing rains to the northern provinces, while the seas would continue to be rough.

 

Binay skips TV address, visits storm victims

Vice President Jejomar Binay yesterday set aside his personal engagements to give priority to victims of Typhoon Luis.

Instead of addressing allegations of corruption by his critics, Binay flew to Cagayan and Isabela to assess the damage wrought by the typhoon and to assess the needs of the victims. The vice president was scheduled to appear on television in the afternoon yesterday to refute allegations that the Makati City Hall Building 2 was overpriced. “There will be an appropriate time to address the issues raised during the Senate blue ribbon committee hearing. The vice president believes the needs of the typhoon victims are immediate and should be attended to,” said Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla, Binay’s spokesman on political affairs. Remulla added that the vice president postponed his television address for later this week. “Work continues for the vice president amid accusations against him and his family. Right now, his priority is the welfare of the people of Cagayan and Isabela who are suffering from the onslaught of Typhoon Luis,” he said.

 

 

 

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