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SHAKE AND BLOW
More rain adds to misery in flooded Philippine capital
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) Aug 21, 2013


Heavy rain pounded the Philippine capital and surrounding areas for a third day Wednesday, adding to the misery of nearly 300,0000 exhausted people displaced from their flooded homes.

Eight people have already been confirmed killed by the monsoon rains that have battered the main Philippine island of Luzon, and provincial authorities warned the death toll would rise with reports of more drownings.

About one third of Manila, a low-lying and sprawling city of 12 million people, remained under water with some areas enduring waist-deep floods, according to Philippine Red Cross secretary general Gwendolyn Pang.

The crisis had eased from Tuesday, when more than half of the city was submerged and the rain was heavier.

But Pang said many people were still suffering, with close to 300,000 people living in evacuation centres or seeking shelter with friends and relatives.

"The problem now is food, and a source of water for drinking. They also have to wash their clothes (while) some had their belongings washed away by the water," Pang told AFP.

One of the worst-affected areas was the coastal district of Cavite, about 18 kilometres (11 miles) from the heart of the capital, where residents were enduring waist-deep water streaming through countless homes.

"We are really pitiful here. People are still shocked. There is no electricity," Lino Ibadlit, a district councillor, told AFP.

He said the local government had brought some food and other relief goods but they were only suitable for one day.

"The people have no choice but to wade through the water to look for food, but stores are either closed or have run out of supplies... we need canned goods, noodles, biscuits," he said.

Ibadlit said health was also starting to become a concern, with children beginning to suffer from colds and skin rashes.

The floods paralysed the capital on Monday and Tuesday, with schools, government offices and the stock exchange closed. The city was even quieter on Wednesday, although it was a public holiday.

People living in important farming regions to the north of Manila were also enduring flooding.

In Pampanga province knee-high water submerged vast areas of rice fields and farming towns.

Marcela Cantellana, 53, said five families whose homes are beside the Porac river had been living inside her two-storey home since the floods struck before dawn on Monday.

"The water went up so quickly. They weren't even able to save their clothes because the water rose to the rooftops in minutes. All of their livestock, their goats, pigs and chickens, were lost," she said.

However the flooding in Pampanga was lower than Tuesday and the Porac river had returned to normal levels on Wednesday, allowing the displaced families at Cantellana's house to start cleaning out their homes.

Local governments reported at least seven more people had died due to the floods in some areas outside of Manila.

However the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council had yet to confirm the fatalities, and the official death toll remained at eight.

Moderate to heavy rain was expected to continue falling across Manila and northern Luzon throughout Wednesday, the state weather bureau said.

The seasonal monsoon was worsened by Tropical Storm Trami, which had been hovering to the north of the Philippines.

Trami was about 500 kilometres (300 miles) northeast of the Philippines on Wednesday and moving slowly away, according to the weather bureau, which said the rains were expected to ease late in the week.

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.

More than 460 people were killed in 2009 when Tropical Storm Ketsana left 80 percent of Manila submerged.

And in August last year, 51 people died when more than a month's worth of rain was dumped in and around Manila in 48 hours.

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New rains kill 21 more in flood-hit China: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Aug 21, 2013
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