UN Thousands evacuated as Typhoon Yagi hits Philippines

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/thousands-evacuated-as-typhoon-yagi-hits-philippines

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-08/13/c_137385862.htm

bp_yagi1_130818_22.jpg


MANILA/BEIJING • More than 54,000 people were moved to safer ground in the Philippine capital and nearby provinces in the last two days due to flash floods caused by heavy rain brought on by Typhoon Yagi.

At least 21,000 people were evacuated on Saturday from Marikina City, one of the cities that make up the Metro Manila region, and another 19,000 were evacuated in nearby Rizal province, Bloomberg reported yesterday.

Families stranded on rooftops in Marikina City posted on Twitter pleading for rescue.

More than 9,000 people were also moved out of their homes from other parts of the capital region, including Quezon City and Valenzuela, police said.

Train services in some areas were halted and many roads were impassable as floodwaters were chest high, according to the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority.

The rain is expected to continue until today, the weather bureau said.



The uncertain conditions, with roads and public transport affected, has led the authorities to order schools and universities to close today in many areas of Metro Manila and surrounding districts, the Philippine Daily Inquirer reported yesterday.

Yagi, also called Karding, is the 11th typhoon to hit the Philippines this year. The country is usually hit by an average of 20 typhoons a year.

In September 2009, tropical storm Ketsana delivered more than a month's worth of rainfall on the capital region in a day, the most in more than 40 years, Bloomberg reported. More than 4.9 million people were affected, and 462 were killed. The disaster also caused 11 billion pesos (S$284 million) in damage to infrastructure, according to government data.

Meanwhile, China's national observatory yesterday upgraded the alert for Yagi from blue to yellow, as the typhoon was forecast to make landfall in the eastern coastal region yesterday evening, Xinhua news agency reported.

At 5pm yesterday, the centre of Yagi was over the East China Sea and about 235km south-east of the city of Taizhou in Zhejiang province, said the National Meteorological Centre in a statement.

Yagi was moving at around 35km per hour towards the north-west with increasing force, the centre said. The typhoon is then expected to weaken as it continues to move inland, Xinhua reported.

China has a four-tier colour-coded weather warning system for typhoons, with red representing the most severe, followed by orange, yellow and blue.

The centre has asked local governments to prepare for possible disasters and warned ships in the affected areas to return to port.
 
In a lighter part of the disaster:

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/for-wetter-or-worse-philippine-bride-defies-storm-10610636

For wetter or worse: Philippine bride defies storm

philippine-bride-wet-wedding.jpg


MANILA: A beaming bride defiantly marching up a flooded church aisle in the Philippines has won hearts as the country suffers a fresh bout of monsoonal rains.

Jobel Delos Angeles, 24, married the father of her two children on Saturday (Aug 11) as Tropical Storm Yagi and the southwest monsoon brought heavy flooding to the capital Manila and nearby areas, including their home province of Bulacan.


In a Facebook video shared over a thousand times, Delos Angeles is all smiles as she walks through brown floodwaters in a white gown and veil before her suited groom clad in flip-flops takes her to the altar.

"Even if it floods or it rains, nothing can stop me. You only get married once, will you postpone it? I was marrying the man I love," Delos Angeles told AFP by phone.

"My gown got wet and heavy but I told myself it was as if I was walking on a red carpet."

The Philippines endures an average of 20 typhoons and storms each year.



The latest storm brought misery to many, with 20,000 residents fleeing the riverside district of Marikina in the national capital region where floods swept away cars, authorities said.

But for Delos Angeles, the weekend was cause for celebration.

She said she and her partner of seven years did not expect bad weather but never considered calling off their wedding even after floodwaters entered the church in Hagonoy town.

It was a double ceremony, with their five-month-old daughter baptised in the same event, she added.

Guests were photographed barefoot, including children who were afraid to slip.

"We didn't want a new schedule as we were already stressed out. Our hometown is really flood-prone," Delos Angeles added.

"No car wanted to bring us to the church so I just rode a boat. We didn't expect so many people would still turn up, even the entourage."



The bride's aunt, Teresa Bautista, posted the video of her niece which has drawn comments from social media users hailing the event as the "wedding of year".

"I felt bad for them but at the same time I am happy they got it through," Bautista told AFP.

Delos Angeles said she had no regrets.

"It is truly memorable. I am so happy. It shows the lesson that there are no what ifs."

Source: AFP/ad
 
In a lighter part of the disaster:

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/for-wetter-or-worse-philippine-bride-defies-storm-10610636

For wetter or worse: Philippine bride defies storm

philippine-bride-wet-wedding.jpg


MANILA: A beaming bride defiantly marching up a flooded church aisle in the Philippines has won hearts as the country suffers a fresh bout of monsoonal rains.

Jobel Delos Angeles, 24, married the father of her two children on Saturday (Aug 11) as Tropical Storm Yagi and the southwest monsoon brought heavy flooding to the capital Manila and nearby areas, including their home province of Bulacan.


In a Facebook video shared over a thousand times, Delos Angeles is all smiles as she walks through brown floodwaters in a white gown and veil before her suited groom clad in flip-flops takes her to the altar.

"Even if it floods or it rains, nothing can stop me. You only get married once, will you postpone it? I was marrying the man I love," Delos Angeles told AFP by phone.

"My gown got wet and heavy but I told myself it was as if I was walking on a red carpet."

The Philippines endures an average of 20 typhoons and storms each year.



The latest storm brought misery to many, with 20,000 residents fleeing the riverside district of Marikina in the national capital region where floods swept away cars, authorities said.

But for Delos Angeles, the weekend was cause for celebration.

She said she and her partner of seven years did not expect bad weather but never considered calling off their wedding even after floodwaters entered the church in Hagonoy town.

It was a double ceremony, with their five-month-old daughter baptised in the same event, she added.

Guests were photographed barefoot, including children who were afraid to slip.

"We didn't want a new schedule as we were already stressed out. Our hometown is really flood-prone," Delos Angeles added.

"No car wanted to bring us to the church so I just rode a boat. We didn't expect so many people would still turn up, even the entourage."



The bride's aunt, Teresa Bautista, posted the video of her niece which has drawn comments from social media users hailing the event as the "wedding of year".

"I felt bad for them but at the same time I am happy they got it through," Bautista told AFP.

Delos Angeles said she had no regrets.

"It is truly memorable. I am so happy. It shows the lesson that there are no what ifs."

Source: AFP/ad


And then the wind tore off everyones clothes and the orgy began.
 
Back
Top Bottom