Typhoons kill scores in Philippines

Back-to-back typhoons left at least 55 people dead in the northern Philippines and rescuers scrambling to deliver food and water to hundreds of villagers stuck on rooftops for four days because of flooding.

Back-to-back typhoons left at least 55 people dead in the northern Philippines and rescuers scrambling to deliver food and water to hundreds of villagers stuck on rooftops for four days because of flooding.

Typhoon Nalgae slammed ashore in north-eastern Isabela province yesterday, then barrelled across the main Luzon Island’s mountainous north and agricultural plains that were still sodden from fierce rain and wind unleashed by a howler just days earlier.

Nalgae left at least three people dead yesterday while Typhoon Nesat killed 52 others in the same region before blowing out on Friday.

Nalgae was whirling 124 miles over the South China Sea from the country’s north east towards southern China today, with sustained winds of 81mph and gusts of 99mph, according to the government weather agency.

Its ferocious wind set off a rockslide in northern Bontoc province yesterday, causing boulders to roll down a mountainside and smash on a passing van, where a passenger was pinned to death and another was injured, police said.

In northern Tarlac province’s Camiling town, an uncle sought safety with his two young nephews as flooding rose in their village Saturday. But one of the children was swept away by rampaging waters and drowned while his uncle and brother remained missing.

A drunken man drowned in flooding in a nearby village, provincial disaster officer Marvin Guiang said.

Nalgae roared through a similar path across areas on Luzon saturated by Typhoon Nesat, which trapped thousands on rooftops and sent huge waves that breached a seawall in Manila Bay. Nesat also pummelled southern China and was downgraded to a tropical storm just before churning into northern Vietnam on Friday afternoon, where flood warnings were issued and 20,000 people evacuated.

In the rice-growing province of Bulacan north of Manila, hundreds of residents in flooded Calumpit town remained trapped on rooftops in four villages for the fourth day, many of them desperately waving for help. Rescuers aboard rubber boats could not reach them because of narrow alleyways.

Two air force helicopters would be deployed today to drop water and food packs to the marooned villagers, officials said.

Calumpit mayor James de Jesus pleaded for more help from the national government.

“The ones waving for help are the ones who need to be rescued first because they have elderly people and children with them,” he told ABS-CBN TV network. “We have a very big problem here ... we’re facing a long flooding.”

Benito Ramos, a retired army general who heads the Office Civil Defence, said floodwater was receding in many areas but freshly-dumped rains by Nalgae may flow down from the mountainous north to the central Luzon provinces of Bulacan and Pampanga, which act like a catch basin. Some officials said water released from nearby dams have exacerbated the flood.

Mr Ramos said he and many rescuers had not slept for days but were elated to see help from many private groups and provinces unaffected by the typhoons.

“Their resiliency is being tested but many people are still smiling and waving,” he saidfrom Calumpit, where he was overseeing rescue work. “It’s grace under pressure.”

In the last four months, prolonged monsoon flooding, typhoons and storms across Southeast Asia, China, Japan and south Asia has left more than 600 people dead or missing.

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