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At least 82 dead in the Philippines due to rain and landslides caused by Tropical Storm Trami

At least 82 dead in the Philippines due to rain and landslides caused by Tropical Storm Trami

Tropical Storm Trami blew away from the northwestern Philippines on Friday, leaving at least 82 dead in landslides and extensive flooding that forced authorities to scramble for more rescue boats to rescue thousands of terrified people trapped, some on their roofs.

But the onslaught may not be over yet: State forecasters have raised the rare possibility that the storm – the 11th and one of the deadliest to hit the Philippines this year – could make a U-turn next week as it is pushed back by high-pressure winds . in the South China Sea.

A Philippine provincial police chief said Friday that 49 people were killed, mostly in landslides triggered by Trami in Batangas province, south of Manila. That brought the total death toll from the storm to at least 65.

Eleven other villagers are still missing in Batangas, Col. Jacinto Malinao Jr. said. to The Associated Press by phone from the lakeside town of Talisay, where he stood next to a villager whose wife and child were buried in the deep mound of mud, boulders and trees.

A person sits on a corrugated iron roof and eats while murky water has risen just below roof level. Clothing hangs on a line above the person.
A person sits on a roof and eats in a flooded area due to heavy rain brought by Tropical Storm Trami in Naga, Camarines Sur on Friday. Philippine rescuers battled the water to reach residents still trapped on the roofs of their homes as the storm moved out to sea. (Zalrian Sayat/AFP/Getty Images)

Using a backhoe and shovels, police searched through three meters of mud, rocks and rubble and found part of a head and foot apparently that of the missing woman and child.

“He is just devastated,” Malinao said of the villager, a fisherman, whose wife and child were buried in the landslide that occurred Thursday afternoon amid heavy rain while he was away fishing cages in a lake.

“He’s in shock and can’t talk. We’re just asking him to point out where their bedroom was so we can dig in.”

Vietnam, Philippines on watch for the next few days

The storm was last tracked Friday afternoon, blowing 410 kilometers west of the northwestern Philippine province of Ilocos Sur with sustained winds of up to 95 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 115 km/h. It was moving northwest at 30 km/h toward Vietnam, which is expected to be hit by Trami from Sunday if it stays on course.

However, the Philippine Weather Bureau said it is possible that high-pressure winds and other weather factors in the South China Sea could force the storm to turn back towards the Philippines.

Several people, including many small children, wear life jackets as they lie in a rubber band on the water near the shore.
In this Philippine Coast Guard photo, residents step out of a rubber boat after being moved to safer ground in Batangas province, Philippines, on Friday. (Philippine Coast Guard/The Associated Press)

President Ferdinand Marcos, sounding irritated, inquired about that prospect during an emergency meeting with Cabinet members and disaster management officials on Friday about the response to the widespread destruction.

“What’s the forecast for that? Is it possible for it to return?” Marcos asked.

A government forecaster told him that Trami could turn west of the Philippines early next week, but it was more likely to blow away from the Philippines again without making landfall.

“It doesn’t have to come ashore to cause damage,” Marcos said, referring to the persistent rainstorms caused by Trami in the Philippines.

Marcos also mentioned a new storm in the Pacific Ocean that could threaten the country again.

“Oh God, it is what it is. We just have to deal with it,” Marcos said.

State forecaster Jofren Habaluyas told the AP that Trami’s possible reversal has drawn interest from government weather experts in Asia, including those from Japan, which has provided information to the Philippines to help monitor the storm.

The 65 storm deaths included 26 villagers killed in floods and landslides in hard-hit Bicol, an agricultural region and tourist destination southeast of Manila popular for Mayon, one of the country’s 24 most active volcanoes with a near-perfect cone.

Several men, wearing blue vests and camouflage pants, walk in a muddy area that appears rural.
In this photo provided by the Calabarzon Regional Police Office, police in the Philippines conduct search and rescue operations after a landslide hit a village and buried some people in Talisay, Batangas province on Friday. (Calabarzon Regional Police Station/The Associated Press)

Although Trami did not develop into a typhoon, it caused unusually heavy rainfall in some regions, including some that saw one to two months of rain in just 24 hours, inundating communities with flash floods.

Officials in the city of Naga, where 11 people died from drowning, and the remote provinces of Camarines Sur and Albay called for more rescue boats at the height of the attack to reach people trapped on the top floors of their homes or on their roofs as the water rose .

In the foothills of Mayon Volcano in Albay province, mud and other debris flowed into nearby towns when the storm hit, flooding homes and cars with black-colored mudslides.

More than 2.6 million people were affected by the deluge, with nearly 320,000 fleeing to evacuation centers or the homes of relatives, disaster management officials said.

The government has closed schools and government offices in the northern island of Luzon. Ferry services between the islands were also suspended, leaving thousands stranded.

Several people stand up to their chests or necks in murky brown water next to debris.
People wade through a flooded road caused by Tropical Storm Trami in Naga, Camarines Sur on Friday. (Zalrian Sayat/AFP/Getty Images)

In Vietnam, state forecasters warned of heavy rains in the central region. Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh has ordered coastal provinces to remain vigilant, closely monitor Trami’s course and brace for unforeseen events.

Last month, Typhoon Yagi ravaged Vietnam, killing 323 people and causing extensive damage worth $3.3 billion, according to a report by the Vietnamese government.

Every year, about 20 storms and typhoons hit the Philippines, a Southeast Asian archipelago located between the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest tropical cyclones on record, left more than 7,300 people dead or missing and flattened entire villages.