twitter.com/ MlaStandard
• P1.7 billion
in farm losses • Road sections in 18 places shut • ’Do everything to restore power’
facebook.com/ ManilaStandardPH
S
Missed your copy of Manila Standard? Call or text our Circulation Hotline at 0917-8848655 or email: circulation@manilastandard.net
manilastandard.net
‘Rolly’ leaves wide swath of damage in 12 provinces 16 died, 2m people affected; infra, crops, homes destroyed
By Vito Barcelo, Othel V. Campos and Macon Ramos-Araneta
T
YPHOON “Rolly,” the most powerful storm to hit the country this year, destroyed tens of thousands of homes and killed at least 16 people, officials said Monday, as communications to the worst-hit areas remained cut off.
VOL. XXXIV • NO. 242 • 3 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2020 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
Ground zero: Catanduanes, Albay bombed out By Joel E. Zurbano, Macon Ramos-Araneta and Maricel V. Cruz
Police deputy director for operations Lt. Gen. Cesar Hawthorne Binag said Monday. "I talked to the regional director before I came here... So far, we established and it was reported that 90 percent of the TYPHOON “Rolly” damaged up to 90 percent of all in- infrastructure was damaged," Binag said, without offering Next page frastructure in Catanduanes province, Philippine National any details.
Catanduanes Island and nearby Albay province bore the brunt of the typhoon, which was packing maximum sustained wind speeds of 225 kilometers per hour (kph) when it slammed into the east coast on Sunday. Ferocious winds and torrential rain toppled power lines, triggered flooding and sparked landslides that engulfed
houses as Rolly swept across the southern part of Luzon. More than 300 houses were buried under volcanic rock and mud flows from Mayon Volcano in Albay province. The typhoon lost intensity as it skirted Metro Manila and headed out to the South China Sea. Disaster officials said five people Next page
DAMAGE SURVEY. President Rodrigo Duterte and Senator Christopher 'Bong' Go make an aerial survey via helicopter of the damage caused by Typhoon 'Rolly' on Monday. They landed in the town of Guinobatan, Albay to see the damage up close of the year's strongest storm, which made landfalls in nearby Tiwi town, Bato in Catanduanes, San Narciso in Quezon and Lobo in Batangas -- leaving the areas in disarray. Photos from Sen. Bong Go, Office of Civil Defense, Philippine Coast Guard, and News5 via Twitter
Duterte orders probe of quarrying in Guinobatan Thousands remain in evacuation centers as ‘Siony’ hovers over PH By Vito Barcelo
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte ordered the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to look into the quarrying activities in Guinobatan town in Albay province after hundreds of res-
idential homes were buried in mud due to super typhoon “Rolly.” In a meeting with his Cabinet secretaries Monday afternoon, Duterte tasked Public Works Secretary Mark Villar to investigate the complaints of residents near the area, who say the mining has
caused landslides in the town of Guinobatan. “Up to 90 percent of homes have been badly damaged or destroyed in some areas. This typhoon has smashed into people's lives and livelihoods on
Next page
UN, EU to help typhoon-hit areas US campaign enters final day, By Rey E. Requejo COVID-19 PH nation on edge AT A GLANCE (AS OF 4 PM NOV. 2)
385,400 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES
2,298 29,301 NEW
ACTIVE
7,269
32
348,830
87
DEATHS
RECOVERIES
NEW
NEW
THE United Nations and the European Union have pledged to support the Philippine government's response to help communities devastated by super Typhoon Rolly on Sunday. In a statement, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Gustavo Gonzalez conveyed to the Philippine government the readiness and willingness of the humanitarian community to support its efforts. “We have not waited for the landfall of this typhoon to mobilize our humanitarian teams and take action,” Gonzalez said. “UN agencies and humanitarian NGOs are already working with relevant government departments and
WASHINGTON―The United States presidential campaign enters its final day Monday (Tuesday in Manila) with a last-minute scramble for votes by Donald Trump and Joe Biden, drawing to a close an extraordinary race that has put a pandemic-stricken country on edge. But while campaigning will halt and voters will have their say on Tuesday, many questions remain over how soon a result will be known due to a flood of mail-in ballots and possible legal challenges. Those factors, along with an unprecedented convergence of social justice
Next page
Next page
By Jess Malabanan and Rio Araja CITY OF SAN FERNANDO— Thousands of evacuees remained in temporary shelters in Central Luzon as typhoon Siony entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR), according to the regional office of the Office of Civil Defense. But as Tropical Storm Rolly
(international name: Goni) got a quicik exit from the Philippines after cutting a swathe of destruction, yet another weather disturbance—Tropical storm Siony—was breathing down on the country's eastern seaboard. Rolly packed maximum sustained winds of 65 kilometers per hour near the center and gustiness of up to 80 kph. It was last tracked 195 kilometers west of Subic, Zambales, moving westward Next page at 20 kph.