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Typhoon Phanfone makes landfall in Philippines on Christmas eve

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MANILA: Typhoon Phanfone smashed into the central Philippines on Tuesday, leaving thousands of people unable to get home for the Christmas holidays and forcing many others to evacuate in the face of the onslaught.


The tropical storm was upgraded to a typhoon shortly before it made landfall on Christmas eve, but early reports indicate there had been no casualties so far.


It struck the southern tip of the island of Samar in the afternoon with gusts of up to 150 kilometres an hour that snapped branches off trees and knocked down power pylons and mobile phone relay towers.


“(There are) no signs of heavy damage except for houses made of light materials,” Ben Evardone, the governor of Eastern Samar province, said, adding there were no casualties there. Just under 1,700 people were evacuated from coastal areas as well as those prone to flooding and landslides, according to early official tallies.


“Some families are reluctant to evacuate because they want to celebrate Christmas at home, but local officials will force them out if they refuse to heed our warnings,” regional civil defence official Reyden Cabrigas said.


The state weather service said homes made of wood, straw or bamboo risked “heavy damage”, though there were so far no reports of giant waves crashing onto coastal communities as the state weather service earlier warned.


Phanfone, Laotian for “animal”, was forecast to cut across the central islands through Christmas Day on Wednesday before roaring out to the South China Sea.


All boats on the storm’s projected path through the central islands were ordered to stay in port and many commercial flights were cancelled, stranding thousands of people who were trooping to their hometowns.


Though much weaker, Phanfone was tracking a similar path as Super Typhoon Haiyan — the country’s deadliest cyclone on record which left more than 7,300 people dead or missing in 2013.


More than 23,000 ferry passengers trying to get home for the Christmas holidays have been stranded at ports as shipping shut down, the coast guard said on Tuesday.


The state weather service said Phanfone would bring moderate to strong winds over the capital Manila on Christmas Day.


The Philippines is the first major landmass facing the Pacific cyclone belt.


As such, the archipelago gets hit by an average of 20 storms and typhoons each year.


Strong winds and associated dangers such as floods, landslides, and — more rarely — giant walls of seawater kill scores of people each year, wipe out harvests and destroy roads, bridges, power lines and other infrastructure. — AFP


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