Residents wade through floodwaters on a street while others watch from the rooftop of their house after tropical storm Fung-Wong battered Cainta, Rizal province, east of Manila yesterday. Right: A resident cleans out her house that was flooded in heavy rains brought by the tropical storm at Tumana village in Marikina City, suburban Manila.

AFP

Manila

Thousands of people displaced by floods triggered by tropical storm Fung-Wong returned to their mud-caked homes in the Philippine capital yesterday, as the death toll from the disaster rose to five, officials said.

Heavy rains paralysed the sprawling metropolis of more than 12mn people and nearby regions on Friday, with roof-high floods chasing 83,000 people from their homes, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

“We have no choice but to come back. We can’t afford to rent an apartment,” butcher’s wife Lovi Barbosa, 35, said as she attempted to remove dirt from the floor of her home near a still swollen creek.

She said she and her five children, aged between two and 10, spent a sleepless night on the cold floor outside a tyre repair shop because the local school was already full of similarly displaced neighbours.

Three weeks’ worth of rain swamped the region on Friday, state meteorologists said, as the eye of the relatively weak storm brushed past the northern tip of the main island of Luzon, more than 400 kilometres  away.

The state weather service said Fung-Wong was forecast to hit Taiwan today.

Many of the areas hardest hit by floods, such as Barbosa’s neighbourhood, are shantytowns illegally occupying the banks of rivers and other waterways. “Generally, the floods have already subsided. People are starting to return to their homes,” Alexander Pama, executive director of the disaster council, said yesterday.

The bad weather left five people dead and one missing, he told a news conference.

The storm itself caused power outages across northern Luzon, while rough seas left a small ferry off the central port of Cebu badly damaged on Friday, Pama added.

Navy rescuers along with nearby commercial ships retrieved 31 people from the stricken vessel, Philippine Navy spokeswoman Commander Marineth Domingo said.

An average of 20 typhoons or major storms hit the Philippines each year, killing hundreds and bringing misery to millions.

Super Typhoon Haiyan, bringing the strongest winds ever recorded on land, left 7,300 people dead or missing across the central Philippines in November last year.

In September 2009, tropical storm Ketsana dumped a month’s worth of rain across Manila in just six hours, unleashing the worst flooding in the capital in four decades and killing more than 460 people.

 

 

 

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