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At least 120 killed by Philippines’ storm, 1 million affected, many buried by landslides

  • Most of the dead are in Baybay, a mountainous area prone to landslides, where 236 people were also injured; search, rescue and retrieval operations continue
  • More than 162,000 displaced residents are sheltering in evacuation centres, while a further 41,000 are living with relatives, government data showed

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Destroyed houses in Leyte province, the Philippines, the day after Storm Megi struck. Photo: AFP

The Philippine military pledged on Thursday to keep up search and rescue efforts after tropical storm Megi ripped through central areas this week, burying many under landslides and killing at least 123 people.

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Megi was the first cyclone this year to hit the Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,600 islands that sees an average of 20 tropical storms a year.

Eighty six of the casualties were in Baybay, a mountainous area prone to landslides in Leyte province, where 236 people were also injured, the city government said in a report. Three others drowned in different provinces, while six people were still missing, the national disaster agency said.

“The search, rescue and retrieval operations will continue,” a Philippine Army infantry unit in Baybay said on Facebook.

Aerial photographs and video from the local government showed collapsed slopes, burying coconut plantations and houses in dirt and mud. In one area, rescuers had to use rubber boats to reach a landslide.

Rescuers after a landslide that slammed Pilar village in Abuyog town, Leyte province, due to heavy rains brought about by tropical Storm Megi. Photo; AFP
Rescuers after a landslide that slammed Pilar village in Abuyog town, Leyte province, due to heavy rains brought about by tropical Storm Megi. Photo; AFP

Megi, which made landfall on Sunday with sustained winds of up to 65 kilometres (40 miles) per hour and gusts of up to 80kph (49mph), has since dissipated.

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