MANILA, Philippines - Four more people were found dead, raising to eight the total number of people who perished as Typhoon Saola, locally known as Gener, slowly crawled away from the sea of northern Luzon, towards Taiwan and China, senior officials said.
Merly Datinginoo drowned in Batangas, southern Luzon; Danieles Hipolito was electrocuted in southern suburban Cavite; Reynante Lingasad Jr drowned in Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte; and another unnamed person was buried by a landslide in northern Luzon, said Undersecretary Benito Ramos, head of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC).
In Metro Manila, classes, private and government offices remained closed, flights were diverted for the second time as a combination of low pressure area (LPA) and southwest monsoon also uprooted trees, toppled billboards, and cut off electricity that affected two million of 10 million residents in the metropolis.
Source: Agensi
Merly Datinginoo drowned in Batangas, southern Luzon; Danieles Hipolito was electrocuted in southern suburban Cavite; Reynante Lingasad Jr drowned in Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte; and another unnamed person was buried by a landslide in northern Luzon, said Undersecretary Benito Ramos, head of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC).
- The list of fatalities in northern Luzon where Typhoon Saolo hit hardest has not yet reached NDRRMC’s Metro Manila office, said Ramos.
- Earlier, one death occurred in Antique, central Philippines; two in Laguna, southern Luzon; and one in Metro Manila’s southern suburban Cavite, areas quite far from northern Luzon where Typhoon Saola remained stationary at sea and did not make a landfall since Saturday, Ramos said, adding that two more were missing in the affected areas.
- About 8,298 families or 40,477 people in 14 provinces of Ilocos and Cagayan in northern Luzon, central, and southern Luzon, Metro Manila, central Philippines, and upper part of southern Philippines were affected by Typhoon Saola which poured 25 mm of rain per hour, considered heavy, within a wide diameter of 700 kilometres, Ramos said.
In Metro Manila, classes, private and government offices remained closed, flights were diverted for the second time as a combination of low pressure area (LPA) and southwest monsoon also uprooted trees, toppled billboards, and cut off electricity that affected two million of 10 million residents in the metropolis.
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