Philippines storm toll hits 143: Officials

Military says 95 bodies were recovered in Cagayan de Oro, a major port on Mindanao island.

MANILA:
The death toll from tropical storm Washi rose to 143 on Saturday with more than 100 others missing after widespread flash floods in the southern Philippines, officials said.

The military said 95 bodies were recovered in Cagayan de Oro, a major port on Mindanao island, while the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said 48 people were killed elsewhere on the island.

"As of now 95 people are dead in Cagayan de Oro," said regional military spokesman Colonel Leopoldo Galon.

He said an entire army division – about 10,000 soldiers – was involved in rescue efforts for the stricken city of half a million people, with three military helicopters aloft above the receding waters to look for survivors.

A total of 125 other people remain missing in the city, he said.

Civil defence director Benito Ramos, the head of the disaster council, said a second army division was deployed in Iligan, a nearby port which reported 40 deaths, and nearby areas.


He told reporters floodwaters rose with alarming speed late Friday as people slept.

Although residents had been warned of the approaching storm, some apparently dismissed the dangers of flash floods and landslides because – unlike the rest of the archipelago – most of Mindanao is rarely hit by storms.

"Complacency apparently set in," Ramos said.

All but five of the confirmed deaths were victims of flash floods, he said. The five others were buried in a landslide in the island's mountainous east.

The Philippines is hit by about 20 storms and typhoons each year, most hitting the north of the country.

 
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