Storm Yagi heads towards China after killing 13 in Philippines

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

epa11579349 People ride atop a truck along a flooded road in Cainta, Rizal province, northeast of Manila, Philippines, 02 September 2024. In a report by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), two people died as tropical storm Yagi hit the Philippines. The state weather agency has warned of possible flash floods in low-lying areas and landslides in mountainous villages.  EPA-EFE/ROLEX DELA PENA

The disruptions in the Philippines come barely a week after heavy monsoon rains flooded parts of Metro Manila and other areas of the country.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

Follow topic:

MANILA – Storm Yagi killed at least 13 people in the Philippines and forced thousands of people to flee to safer ground, and is now slowly heading for mainland China with high winds and squally rains.

Schools and government offices in Manila and nearby provinces remain shut for a second straight day on Sept 3. But foreign currency trading that was suspended on Sept 2 resumed. Stock trading has been uninterrupted.

At least seven people died in Antipolo City, east of Metro Manila, as rains triggered landslides, according to a police report. Four others were reported killed in the Bicol region and central Visayas because of drowning or electrocution, the authorities said.

One person died in central Visayas, specific cause of death unknown, and another in Pililla town in Rizal province.

Rescuers are searching for four people believed to have been swept away by floods in Antipolo, the state-owned People’s Television Network said on social media platform X.

The tropical cyclone is unlikely to come within 600km of Hong Kong, but the city’s weather monitoring department said it will issue Standby Signal No. 1 between 5pm and 8pm on Sept 3. 

The storm is moving westward at 25kmh, packing maximum winds of 85kmh and gusts of up to 105kmh, according to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration. It expects Yagi to reach typhoon category on Sept 5 and peak intensity by late Sept 6 or early on Sept 7 before making landfall in China. Hainan island and Vietnam are along Yagi’s path, according to the US Joint Typhoon Warning Centre.

The disruptions in the Philippines come barely a week after heavy monsoon rains flooded parts of Metro Manila and other areas of the country. In July, more than 30 people died as Typhoon Gaemi brought floods and landslides.

The orange rainfall warning, the second highest in a three-level alert system, has been hoisted in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

The South-east Asian nation is one of the most natural-disaster-prone countries in the world, where about 20 cyclones pass through each year, causing deaths and damage to agriculture, homes and infrastructure.

In 2013, Super Typhoon Haiyan killed more than 6,300 in the Philippines. Bloomberg

See more on