Storm Kai-tak kills 26 in Philippines

Tropical storm Kai-tak has killed 26 people, cut power supplies, forced the cancellation of flights, and stranded 15,000 people in the central Philippines.

At least 26 people were killed while several residents were missing in an island province in central Philippines after tropical storm Kai-tak brought heavy rains that triggered landslides.

Kai-tak cut power supplies in many areas, forced the cancellation of several flights, stranded more than 15,000 people in various ports in the region, and prompted nearly 88,000 people to seek shelter in evacuation centres.

The Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office of Biliran island said on Sunday 26 residents had died, but the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council has yet to make any official announcement about fatalities.

Biliran Governor Gerardo Espina Jr confirmed the deaths in an interview with DZMM radio, with 23 people still missing, he said.

"We received reports of three deaths coming from the DILG (Department of the Interior and Local Government) but these are for confirmation," said NDRRMC spokeswoman Romina Marasigan. "We are still trying to check the others."

Many areas were flooded, damaging crops and infrastructure.

Kai-tak has weakened to a tropical depression after barrelling through the eastern region of Visayas on Saturday, hitting islands and coastal towns such as Tacloban City where supertyphoon Haiyan claimed 8000 lives in 2013.


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Source: AAP


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