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Thursday, November 30, 2006
Typhoon Durian intensifies, storm alerts raised over eastern Philippines
MANILA, Philippines -- Officials canceled school in Manila and nearby provinces Wednesday and raised storm alerts as powerful Typhoon Durian barreled toward an eastern Philippine island.
With sustained winds of 119 mph and gusts of up to 140 mph, Durian has become a super typhoon, said chief weather forecaster Nathaniel Cruz.
Cruz said officials approved his recommendation to suspend Thursday's classes in metropolitan Manila and four nearby provinces. Classes already have been suspended on the island province of Catanduanes, where the typhoon is expected to slam ashore Thursday morning. They also have been suspended in five other eastern provinces.
More than 25 provinces and the Philippine capital, Manila, are under storm alerts because of the typhoon, named for a pungent fruit native to Southeast Asia.
Moving westward at a relatively fast 15 mph, Manila or the region just south of it could be battered by the typhoon Friday morning.
Antonio Golez, deputy chairman of the National Disaster Coordinating Council, said all local governments and agencies in the affected areas have been alerted for emergency operations.
He said his agency also has directed billboard owners to pull down their tarpaulins to prevent the repeated collapse of such structures that killed at least one person when another typhoon hit Manila in September.
Cruz said the central Bicol region, about 185 miles southeast of Manila, was already feeling Durian's effects with rains and winds.
He warned residents in low-lying and coastal areas to watch out for storm surges, or big waves generated by strong winds.
In late September, Typhoon Xangsane left 230 people dead and missing in and around Manila. Typhoon Cimaron killed 19 people and injured 58 others last month, and earlier this month, Chebi sliced through the central Luzon region, killing one.
About 20 typhoons and tropical storms hit the Philippines each year.
Mayor Noel Rosal of Legazpi city in northeastern Albay province, one of the areas ravaged by the previous typhoons, said disaster response agencies were working overtime to prepare for Durian.
"Electric power hasn't even been restored to some villages. But now that the threat is here, we have no choice but to prepare," Rosal told Manila Radio DZRH.
In central Sorsogon province, Mayor Guillermo So said the coast guard barred ferries from leaving ports.