Heavy rain pummels flooded Philippines

Source: Pano feed

Residents ride on a bamboo raft over floodwaters in the farming town of Novaleta, on August 19, 2013. Torrential rain has hit large parts of the Philippine capital and surrounding areas for a second day.

Residents ride on a bamboo raft over floodwaters in the farming town of Novaleta, on August 19, 2013. Torrential rain has hit large parts of the Philippine capital and surrounding areas for a second day.



Graphic map showing the Philippines capital where torrential rains have closed schools and offices for the second consecutive day.

Graphic map showing the Philippines capital where torrential rains have closed schools and offices for the second consecutive day.





Torrential rain relentlessly battered the flood-soaked Philippine capital and surrounding farming areas on Tuesday, raising fears this week’s monsoon death toll would climb well above three.

Schools and government offices in Manila and many neighbouring regions were closed for a second consecutive day, as floods swelled high into urban as well as rural homes.


The state weather agency warned the rain would continue through Tuesday, issuing its top level red alert for Manila and neighbouring provinces.


The red alert means “serious flooding” is likely in low-lying areas, and more than three centimetres (1.8 inches) of rain is expected every hour.


Three people had already been confirmed killed and four others were missing due to the rains, according to the government’s disaster agency’s latest tally on Monday night.


Most of the victims were in the mountainous north of the main island of Luzon, more than 200 kilometres (120 miles) from Manila.


The heavy rains were due to the seasonal monsoon being exacerbated by Tropical Storm Maring, which was hovering to the north of the Philippines.


The Southeast Asian archipelago endures about 20 major storms or typhoons annually, generally in the second half of the year and many of them deadly.




Đăng ký: VietNam News

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