Rains dumped by Tropical Storm “Gener” (international name: Saola) across the country flooded communities, swelled rivers, triggered landslides, damaged crops and roads, and canceled domestic flights as it moved toward northern Luzon.
A man drowned in Antique on Saturday, while more than a thousand people were evacuated in Negros Occidental and Maguindanao due to flooding.
Rough seas in Cebu province have forced boats to cancel their trips over the past two days.
In Metro Manila, authorities advised local government units on Sunday to evacuate residents near the Tullahan River because the water in La Mesa Dam was about to breach the spilling level. Excess water from the dam drains into the river that snakes through Quezon, Caloocan, Valenzuela and Navotas cities.
As of 4 p.m. Sunday, Gener was spotted 380 kilometers east of Aparri, Cagayan, with peak winds of 95 km per hour near the center and gustiness of up to 120 kph, said the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa). It was moving north-northwest at 15 kph.
Public storm signal warnings were hoisted over portions of northern Luzon as Gener, whose band of clouds has a diameter of 600 km, slightly intensified as it crept toward the country’s northern tip.
The Pagasa placed Cagayan, including Calayan and Babuyan groups of islands, and the Batanes Group of Islands under Storm Signal No. 2. It said sustained winds of 60 kph to 100 kph were expected in the province until today.
Any form of sea travel in the affected areas would be risky, the agency said as it reminded residents living in coastal areas to be on alert for big waves and storm surges.
Storm Signal No. 1 was hoisted over the provinces of Isabela, Kalinga and Apayao, as winds of 30 to 60 kph were expected to last until Tuesday.
The weather bureau advised against traveling on small seacraft and fishing boats.
The rest of Luzon and the Visayas will experience cloudy skies with scattered to widespread rain showers and thunderstorms, while Mindanao will be cloudy and may have isolated rain showers and thunderstorms.
Moderate to strong winds blowing from the southwest will prevail over southern Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao while winds from the northeast to northwest will prevail over the rest of Luzon. Coastal waters in these areas will be moderate to rough.
Pagasa warned residents in low-lying and mountainous areas against flash floods and landslides as heavy to intense rainfall was expected.
Gener is expected to enhance the southwest monsoon, bring rains over southern Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao.
At Ninoy Aquino International Airport, 17 domestic flights, mostly to Caticlan, Aklan, and mostly morning flights were canceled Sunday due to bad weather.
At Terminal 3, nine Cebu Pacific flights to and
from Caticlan, the gateway to the resort island of Boracay, were
canceled, according to an advisory issued by the Manila International
Airport Authority at 2:30 p.m.
An Air Philippines flight from Manila to
Caticlan and back was also canceled, along with two Cebu Pacific flights
to and from Legazpi City and San Jose, Occidental Mindoro, and a Zest
Air flight to and from Legazpi.
In Isabela, the provincial government has set
aside funds to provide fishermen, especially those in coastal towns
facing the Pacific Ocean, with cash assistance from July 29 to July 31.
Governor Faustino Dy III said P250-P300 cash
was allotted a day to each of about 500 fishermen in the towns of
Maconacon, Divilacan, Palanan and Dinapigue.
“It is as if we were buying what they would
have caught, so they would not go out to sea while the waters are rough
and dangerous,” he said.
In Central Luzon, the Pampanga River Basin’s
Flood Forecasting and Warning Center said flooding was possible in
communities along the Pampanga River from Nueva Ecija to Pampanga.
Josefina Timoteo, regional director of the
Office of Civil Defense (OCD), said heavy rains in Bulacan on Saturday
night caused flooding in at least seven villages in San Miguel town. On
Sunday morning, however, the floodwaters, which reached up to 2 feet,
started to recede, she said.
Timoteo said operators of the Bustos Dam in Bulacan began releasing minimal volumes of water due to heavy rains.
In Occidental Mindoro, heavy rains caused landslides and massive flooding on Sunday.
Four sections of the 22-kilometer Mindoro West
Coastal Road were rendered impassable due to road damage, provincial
administrator Mariano Montales said.
Montales, quoting disaster authorities, said
the rainfall exceeded 25 millimeters per hour, causing waist-deep floods
on Pandan Island in Sablayan town and in Paluan town.
As of 1 p.m., Montales said residents were being evacuated.
“We don’t have reports of any casualty yet, but the rains damaged crops,” he said.
Local authorities ordered a preemptive
evacuation of 60 families from Barangay (village) Burgos in Rodriguez,
Rizal, early Sunday but they were allowed to return home at 1:30 p.m.,
according to the Regional Disaster Risk Reduction and Management
Council.
In Antique, Ronald Necor, 33, drowned on
Saturday after he was swept by strong currents in the Paliwan River in
Bugasong town, according to the OCD in Western Visayas.
In Negros Occidental, a total of 238 families,
or about 1,000 people, have been evacuated in Bago City and Hinoba-an
town since Friday evening due to flooding.
Small landslides were reported in three barangays in Tigbauan town in Iloilo last week.
In Cebu, rough seas forced some vessels to
return to their ports of origin, while others canceled their trips on
Saturday and Sunday, stranding passengers.
Trips of the Cebu-based Starcraft vessels of Sea Highway Carrier Inc., which ply the Cebu-Bohol route, were canceled Sunday.
Clemer Lines has suspended all trips to Getafe since Sunday morning.
The MV Jun Mar 2, which serves the
Camotes-Danao City route, and Cokaliong Shipping Lines’ noon trip for
Palompon, Leyte, also canceled their trips.
An OceanJet 5 fast craft carrying 197
passengers and 13 crew from Tagbilaran City in Bohol ran aground as it
approached the south entrance of Mactan Channel at past 8 p.m. on
Saturday.
When a sister vessel, OceanJet 6, responded to
rescue the passengers, it also ran aground on Shell Island, according to
Punzalan. It went back to Pier 1 by itself while OceanJet 5 was towed
by the tugboat Metro Tug 5 back to Pier 1.
In Maguindanao, 14 villages in at least three
towns were submerged by floodwaters that swelled rivers draining into
the Liguasan Marsh, the OCD in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao
(ARMM) said Sunday.
The affected towns include Kabuntalan, Northern Kabuntalan and Rajah Buayan, said OCD-ARMM Director Loreto Rirao.
“There are no reports yet of mass evacuation, but we are constantly monitoring the situation,” Rirao said.
He was referring to the inundated villages of
Lower Taviran, Gambar, Butilen, Katidtuan and Pagalungan, all in
Kabuntalan; Panadtabanan, Pidsandawan and Malibpoloc, in Rajah Buayan;
and Montay, Tumaginting, Guiawa, Sabaken, Kapinpilan and Libungan, all
in Northern Kabuntalan.
Initial reports from the agriculture department showed that some 40 percent of Buayan corn and rice crops had been damaged.
Rajah Buayan Mayor Jacob Ampatuan said a
portion of the Liguasan Marsh within his municipality “that used to be
visible has been submerged 3 to 5 feet deep.”
Reports from
Jeanette I. Andrade and Jerome Aning in Manila; Villamor Visaya Jr.,
Inquirer Northern Luzon; Tonette Orejas, Inquirer Central Luzon; Maricar
Cinco, Inquirer Southern Luzon; Nestor Burgos Jr. and Jhunnex
Napallacan, Inquirer Visayas; and Charlie C. Señase, Inquirer Mindanao
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