The death toll from two storms which battered the Philippines rose to 45 Sunday as several towns remained under water and rain kept falling in northern regions, disaster monitoring officials said.
The rain was caused by a cold front, dragged into the country by Typhoon Nona (international name Melor) and Tropical Depression Onyok which hit the Philippines in succession last week.
Floods almost three meters deep covered some riverside areas north of the capital Manila as heavy rain kept falling, civil defense offices said.
“Our home has been flooded up to the waist. It has been flooded for over two days,” said Mary Jane Bautista, 35, in the industrial town of Calumpit 50 kilometers north of the capital.
Her family and several others were forced to take refuge on nearby high ground — in front of a church where their only shelter is the awning over the entrance.
“My husband has to wade through the waters to go home to get supplies. If we need water, he has to go to the faucet in our kitchen,” she told AFP, expressing fears the current could wash him away.
“We had some food but it just ran out,” she said, complaining that government relief goods had not yet reached her.
Around her the streets had turned into fast-moving rivers, passable only by rowboats and people using inner tubes.
Many low-lying areas north of Manila act as a catchment area for rain in other parts of the main island of Luzon.
“It (the flood) really takes a long time to recede because this is the lowest area,” said Glenn Diwa, an officer with the regional disaster council.
READ: Rains, floods torment PH
Over 54,000 people in the region were huddling in government evacuation centres, she said, adding there was no guarantee they would be home by Christmas, one of the biggest holidays in the largely Catholic nation.
Nona hit the southeast of Luzon on December 14 and moved west across the archipelago.
Even as it departed to the South China Sea, another storm named locally as Onyok hit the southern island of Mindanao and brought more heavy rain.
Almost a week after Nona struck, the death toll was still rising, with the bodies of four dead fishermen washed up in the eastern region of Bicol.
“They left during clear weather. But they were caught by the typhoon on the way home,” said Cedric Daep, the region’s civil defense chief.
The unregistered vessel did not have a radio or even life vests, he told AFP.
The government weather station said Onyok had dissipated and the weather would improve nationwide by Monday.
The nation of 100 million people is battered by an average of 20 typhoons annually, many of them deadly.
In 2013, Super Typhoon Haiyan wiped out entire fishing communities in the central islands, leaving 7,350 people dead or missing.
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