Philippines authorities desperately try to restore power in wake of deadly Typhoon Phanfone

Phanfone, the seventh typhoon to strike the Philippines this year, has killed at least 28 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.

Rescuers carry a body believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone.

Rescuers carry a body believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone. Source: AFP

The death toll from a Christmas typhoon that tore through the central Philippines has risen to 28, with 12 people missing, as authorities move to restore power and residents tried to repair damaged homes.

Typhoon Phanfone hit late on Tuesday with winds of up to 120km/h and gusts of 150km/h, dumping sheets of uninterrupted rain on a string of islands, damaging hundreds of homes and causing flooding in eight areas.

Rescuers carry a body believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone.
Rescuers carry a body believed to be one of several fishermen who went missing at the height of Typhoon Phanfone. Source: AFP


It was the seventh typhoon to strike the Philippines this year and came as millions of people in the predominantly Catholic country were heading home to celebrate Christmas with families.

Some 43,000 people were in temporary shelters on Friday, among the 185,000 impacted by the typhoon, which destroyed 49 homes and partially damaged 2000.

There was widespread travel disruption with 115 flights cancelled and thousands of people stranded by the suspension of ferries due to storm surges.

A house destroyed at the height of Typhoon Phanfone is seen in Balasan town in Iloilo province.
A house destroyed at the height of Typhoon Phanfone is seen in Balasan town in Iloilo province. Source: AFP


It was unclear how the deaths occurred, but officials said some were hit by trees, electrocuted or drowned.

"People did not expect that the storm would be that devastating," said disaster agency spokesman Mark Timbal.




Though less powerful than other typhoons this year, Phanfone made landfall in some of the country's poorest and least-developed islands.

Among them was the island of Samar, which bore the brunt of Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, the Philippines' most powerful and deadliest storm on record. It killed more than 6300 people.

Residents there were clearing debris, with wooden pillars and sheets of corrugated iron roof that were once homes, scattered across the ground. Men pulled tried to recover fishing boats with tangled or damaged outriggers.

Motorists wade through a flooded highway, caused by heavy rains due to typhoon Phanfone, in Ormoc City, Leyte province in central Philippines.
Motorists wade through a flooded highway, caused by heavy rains due to typhoon Phanfone, in Ormoc City, Leyte province in central Philippines. Source: AFP


Samar resident Virgilo Catayas, whose sibling was among those killed by Haiyan, said he lost another to hypertension when Phanfone hit.

"We can't really do much if that's what happened, we'll have to accept it," he told broadcaster ABS-CBN.

"The important thing is to stay strong," he said, sitting next to a casket.

Television showed minor damage to the airport at Kalibo, an alternative gateway to the holiday island of Boracay, while the disaster agency said 55 schools had suffered some damage.

The agriculture department estimated initial damages of 569 million pesos ($A16.10 million) mostly to fish farms.

Images on social media showed government workers clearing trees from roads, with a clear blue sky after the storm moved out over the South China Sea late on Wednesday.


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