Filipinos brace for typhoon

Filipino children walk past a stranded cargo ship washed ashore in Anibong village, which was severely damaged by the 2013 Typhoon Haiyan in Tacloban City. Photo: Francis R. Malasig

Filipino children walk past a stranded cargo ship washed ashore in Anibong village, which was severely damaged by the 2013 Typhoon Haiyan in Tacloban City. Photo: Francis R. Malasig

Published Dec 5, 2014

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Manila - Ports were shut across the Philippines, leaving thousands of travellers stranded, and some local governments ordered forced evacuations on Friday as Typhoon Hagupit swept towards eastern coasts of the island nation.

More than 2 000 passengers were stuck in ports in Manila, the central Philippines and Mindanao island in the south after the coastguard stopped sea travel ahead of the Category 5 storm, which could hit areas devastated by Typhoon Haiyan last year.

“We've warned them early to move away from shore, not just anchor their ships, because previously they just anchored their ships... The waves lifted them and washed them ashore,” Armand Balilo, a coastguard spokesman, said in a radio interview.

Hagupit was churning across the Pacific with the eye of the storm around 500km south-east of the Philippines, the local weather bureau said, packing winds of up to 215km/h near the centre with gusts of up to 250km/h.

It was expected to slam into Eastern Samar province in the central Philippines on Saturday, bringing torrential rain and 3- to 4-metre-high storm surges, the weather bureau said. The storm was moving towards land at around 15km/h

On Thursday, the government said it was considering declaring a state of national calamity to freeze prices of basic goods, and President Benigno Aquino ordered the trade department to send more food supplies to provinces at risk amid reports of panic-buying of basic supplies.

The storm could take the same track as Haiyan, which left more than 7 000 dead or missing and more than 4 million homeless or with damaged houses when it battered the central Philippines in November 2013, the weather bureau added.

While the local weather bureau and the Japan Meteorological Agency predicted Hagupit - Filipino for lash - making a direct hit on the central Philippines, the forecasting website Tropical Storm Risk and the Joint Typhoon Warning Centre of the US navy showed the storm veering north, closer to the capital Manila.

The Japan Meteorological Agency classified Hagupit as a “violent” storm while the US navy called it a super typhoon.

Tropical Storm Risks was predicting on Friday that the typhoon would have weakened to a Category 4 - still a powerful storm - when it made landfall.

Eastern Samar and the island of Leyte were worst-hit by 250km/h winds and storm surges brought by Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall.

About 25 000 people still live in tents, shelters and bunkhouses more than a year after Haiyan.

Reuters

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