VOL. XXXII • NO. 213 • 4 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2018 • www.manilastandard.net • editorial@manilastandard.net
RACE FOR LIFE.
A slippered father runs double time while cuddling protectively his sick child, with a companion holding high the dextrose bottle, as they transfer to another car when their ambulance is checked along the national highway by toppled electric posts caused by unforgiving winds from Super Typhoon 'Ompong' after it slammed hours earlier into Cagayan Valley at dawn Saturday. AFP
'DEATH AND DESTRUCTION' 'OMPONG' LEAVES 10 DEAD, MASSIVE DAMAGE TO PH
'IT FELT LIKE END OF THE WORLD'
By Francisco Tuyay and Joel Zurbano
TUGUEGARAO—Bebeth Saquing has seen dozens of storms in her lifetime, but nothing prepared her for the terror of Super Typhoon ''Mangkhut'' as it roared over her Philippine home Saturday packing winds of more than 250 kilometers (155 miles) per hour. The most powerful storm to hit the region so far this year left a trail of battered homes, landslides and fallen trees in its wake. At least four people were killed as the typhoon smashed across the rural north of the country, a farming area home to millions. “It felt like the end of the world... that was stronger than Lawin,” said Saquing, 64, referring to a powerful super typhoon which hit the region in 2016. Turn to A2
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UPER Typhoon ''Ompong,'' the 15th and strongest storm to hit the country this year, ferociously whirled away towards the West Philippine Sea before sundown Saturday, leaving in its swathe an undetermined value in destroyed agricultural crops and infrastructure and an initial ten people dead and six others missing.
The typhoon struck the northern tip of Luzon and threatened the lives and homes of nearly four million people of the country’s 106 million population. Turn to A2
RODY ON 'STORM WATCH' MODE
By Nat Mariano
FACES OF DESTRUCTION. Several power posts are knocked down Saturday (top photo) like this frame in Barangay Del Monte in Quezon City after Typhoon 'Ompong' caused violent winds and strong rains in the metropolis, with a relief center warehouse (top left) being prepared by the Department of Social Welfare and Development. In Manila (top right) motorists traverse flooded Roxas Blvd. along Manila Bay Saturday morning while families take shelter at an evacuation center (below) in Delpan in Manila’s Tondo district. Manny Palmero, Norman Cruz
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte, who normally spends weekends in his home city of Davao, is in Manila during the weekend monitoring developments in areas affected by Typhoon ''Ompong,'' Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque said Saturday. “He’s in Manila. He did not leave and is monitoring,” Roque said in a command conference at the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council office in Quezon City.
“Knowing him, he will be the first to go to the affected areas as soon as the weather will allow his choppers to take off,” the Palace official added. Duterte tasked six of his Cabinet officials to be his “alter egos”in the provinces in Northern Luzon to facilitate government response to Ompong. Roque, meanwhile, was ordered to monitor information dissemination about the typhoon. According to Roque, the President did not give any last-minute directive about Turn to A2
WORLD/ B2
FLORENCE'S WRATH:
MOM, BABY
ALIBABA FOUNDER RETIRING
AMONG VICTIMS
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