| Philippine typhoon death toll rises to 47, nine still missing MANILA (Xinhua) -- The official death toll from  Typhoon Phanfone has risen to 47 and is likely to keep rising as nine more  persons are reported missing, the government said on Monday. In its updated report, the National Disaster Risk  Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said the dead were recorded in four  regions in the central Philippines and the northeastern tip of Mindanao island  in the southern Philippines.
 
                    
                      |  |  
                      | A  man walks past damaged homes after Typhoon Phanfone swept through Tanauan,  Leyte in the Philippines.   --Photo Agencies 
 |                      The disaster agency said 16 died in Iloilo, five in  Capiz, five in Aklan, one in Cebu, one in  Southern Leyte, five in Leyte, one in Biliran, five in Eastern Samar, one in  Samar, five in Oriental Mindoro and two in Occidental Mindoro provinces. At  least 140 people were injured, it added.Police and local officials said most of the deaths  were due to drowning, falling trees and accidental electrocution.
 The agency said the typhoon caused over 1 billion  pesos (roughly US$19.7 million) in damage.
 Typhoon Phanfone, which made landfall on Tuesday  afternoon in Eastern Samar province, left a trail of destruction as it  barrelled through towns and villages across the central Philippines and parts  of Mindanao.
 The typhoon forced hundreds of thousands of villages  to abandon communities prone to flood and landslides, toppled trees and  electrical posts, and ripped off tin roofs before blowing into the South China  Sea on Saturday.
 The NDRRMC said Phanfone affected over 1.7 million  villagers in 6,510 villages in six regions. As of Sunday, the agency said  106,309 people are housed in 635 temporary shelters.
 A total of 372 schoolhouses, nearly 305 houses, 31  health facilities and 98 government offices were damaged by heavy rain and  fierce winds, the agency added.
 The agency said the typhoon stranded people who were  rushing home to spend Christmas with their loved ones in the provinces as 54  roads and bridges were affected, and forced the cancellations of 116 domestic  and three international flights. Sea travels were also halted.
 Phanfone is the 21st typhoon to hit the Philippines  this year. About 20 typhoons and tropical storms batter the Philippines each  year. Aside from typhoons, the archipelago of more than 100 million people has  frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
 The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone  countries in the world mainly due to its location in the Pacific Ring of Fire  and Pacific typhoon belt.
 In 2013, the World Bank said Typhoon Haiyan resulted  in the loss of 6,300 lives and caused an estimated US$12.9 billion in damages,  or about 4.7 percent of the Philippines’ gross domestic product.
 (Latest Update December 31, 2019
 |