Boats bring Philippine flood victims to safety as death toll rises
Schools remained closed and electricity was down in swathes of the archipelago nation's largest island as the national disaster agency reported 25 dead and eight missing since last Friday.
But those numbers did not account for three construction workers buried in a landslide as they rested Thursday in Cavite province, south of the capital Manila, according to rescuers.
A wall above their construction site collapsed onto the men below after days of rain softened the soil under it, said rescue team member Rosario Jose.
"All the bodies were found in the mud," she said. A lone survivor was pulled from the rubble.
In the west coast province of La Union, where Typhoon Co-May arrived in the early hours, a family of four was rescued Friday morning after being trapped on the second floor of their wooden home.
"They couldn't leave their house because the flood was waist-deep and they have children," said a rescue official who asked not to be named as they were not authorised to speak to media.
"Many had been calling us since early morning, but we were having challenges in responding because the rain and winds were so strong," they said, adding that a break in the downpour meant rescue operations were now in full stride.
In Bulacan province, just north of Manila, AFP journalists saw entire villages half submerged in floodwaters.
Lauro Sabino, 54, said he and his wife had evacuated their home in the morning after a frightening night of hard winds.
"It was as if my roof was being blown off. It was creaking. The rain poured the entire night," he said, adding they would sleep at a local market until flooding subsided.
"The same thing happens every time. There's no solution," agreed Mary Rose Navia, 25, a housewife whose husband was unable to go to work on Friday.
"The floodwaters are just getting deeper."
President Ferdinand Marcos on Thursday explicitly tied the recent flooding to climate change, saying his country had to accept this was the "new normal".
"This is the way it's going to be as far as we know for... many decades to come, so let's just prepare," he said in a televised cabinet briefing.
The storm, which was weakening as it made its way north by northeast, was expected to be gone from the Philippines by Saturday morning.
pam-fb/cwl

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
43 minutes ago
- News24
Nigeria issues flood alert for over half of its 36 states
Nigerian weather forecasters on Wednesday warned that parts of 21 of the country's 36 states are likely to experience flooding in the coming days due to heavy rains, as Lagos officials warned residents in some areas to evacuate. The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) said 'conditions are highly conducive for intense and prolonged rainfall, which, when combined with already saturated soil profiles and elevated river levels, significantly increases the risk of flooding'. The weather agency flagged several 'high risk' states, including Niger State, where floods flattened a neighbourhood and killed at least 200 in May. Although not on the warning list, more than 10 hours of heavy rainfall on Monday flooded several areas in the commercial hub Lagos of around 20 million people, where officials warned residents in 'lowland' areas to evacuate. 'Based on the predictions from NiMet, we are going to have much more rain this year than we had last year,' Tokunbo Wahab, Lagos state commissioner for the environment, told local broadcaster Channels Television. 'For those who stay in the lowland of Lagos, they may have to move to the upland pending when rain recedes,' he said, listing some popular neighbourhoods such as Lekki and Ikorodu. Heavy rains sweep Nigeria between June and November, often triggering dangerous floods, where poor infrastructure and inadequate drainage often worsen the impact across Africa's most populous country. In 2022, more than 500 people died and 1.4 million were displaced in the country's worst floods in a decade, while last year, more than 300 people were killed and over a million displaced in at least 34 out of Nigeria's 36 states.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Rains and Broken Roads Complicate Flood Rescue in Indian Himalayas
Harsh rains, collapsed roads and uprooted electrical lines have complicated ongoing rescue efforts in the Indian Himalayas, officials said Wednesday, after flash floods killed at least four people and left dozens missing the day before. Confirming the precise death toll may take up to a week, officials said, warning that the number of casualties could rise substantially. On Wednesday, Pushkar Singh Dhami, the chief minister of the northern state of Uttarakhand, told an Indian news outlet that at least 190 people had been rescued from the wreckage, after a muddy torrent of water ripped into the village of Dharali the day before, bulldozing buildings and burying the area in mud. The town's central marketplace was destroyed, according to the district office managing the disaster relief, and roads were damaged and transportation was difficult. People in the area were evacuated to shelter sites, and many families were anxiously waiting to find out the fate of relatives caught in the natural disaster, the office added. Indian Army forces, equipped with tracking dogs, drones and earth-moving equipment, have supplemented the rescue effort. Images of the effort published by Reuters show teams using ziplines to rescue marooned victims and deploying heavy machinery to move large boulders and pieces of debris. The floods and landslide caused large boulders to block narrow mountain roads that lead into Dharali, and ripped mobile phone towers and electric lines from the ground, making it difficult to establish communication with the area. Those factors, along with strong, continued rains, have made it harder for rescue workers to quickly locate missing people, officials said. Uttarakhand is prone to floods and landslides. In 2013, the state suffered its deadliest floods, which left over 6,000 people dead. The monsoon rains this year have also created significant damage in the neighboring state of Himachal Pradesh. Nearly 200 people have been killed over the past six weeks in monsoon-related disasters, according to official data, and 300 others have been injured and three dozen missing.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Video compilation misrepresents old, unrelated clips as Wyoming hailstorm
A video compilation shared across platforms purports to show hailstones pelting the US state of Wyoming as a powerful storm pummeled Cheyenne on August 1, 2025. While reports indicated that the city experienced large hail, the clips spreading online are old and unrelated, with many filmed years earlier in Australia and other locations. "August 1, 2025 Baseball size hail hammers south side of Cheyenne, WY," says text over an August 3, 2025 TikTok video viewed more than 3.5 million times. Similar posts spread in English and Spanish and across TikTok and other platforms, including Facebook and X, with some users invoking conspiracy theories about weather modification. "This isn't 'just weather' anymore..." says one post on X. "#WeWantAnswers." The posts follow extreme weather in Cheyenne that, according to local news outlets and the National Weather Service (NWS), included severe thunderstorm and tornado warnings. NWS local storm reports say the city saw hail as big as tennis balls (archived here). But the dramatic video footage in the compilation is unrelated to the August 1 hailstorm. AFP could not verify the origin of two of the 14 clips in the montage. But the other 12 are all outdated and recorded outside Wyoming, AFP determined using reverse image searches, keyword searches and geolocation. Arkansas, June 2023 The compilation's first video traces to a hailstorm that hit Lake Hamilton, a census-designated place in Hot Springs, Arkansas, in June 2023. The footage appeared in local news reports and on the video-licensing website ViralHog (archived here and here). Germany, August 2023 The second video, of hail damaging a Tesla, originated on TikTok. The owner of the vehicle posted it in August 2023 alongside other footage of the car (archived here and here). The original video is geotagged to the German state of Bavaria, and the license plate begins with TÖL, the code for the town of Bad Tölz. A sign visible in another video of the Tesla appears to advertise a pet-supply company located in the same district. Texas, April 2023 The third clip, which shows a bull trotting as hail splashes into a pool in front of him, dates to April 2023 and was filmed in Dublin, Texas (archived here and here). Homeowner Gary Clayton told local media the animal was seeking shelter under trees. AFP confirmed the location using Google Earth satellite imagery. Australia, January 2020 The compilation's fourth video is an inverted version of a recording showing workers at the National Gallery of Australia taking cover from a January 2020 hailstorm in Parkes, a town in New South Wales. The footage was originally posted to Facebook -- where its visibility has since been restricted -- and published by the video-licensing agency Storyful (archived here). AFP geolocated the footage to the art museum, where umbrellas, tables and a water fountain in the video match Google Street View imagery from the site (archived here). Australia, October 2020 The fifth video from the mashup is a flipped version of footage captured as hail rained down on Springfield Lakes, a suburb in Queensland, Australia. It is featured in a highlight reel of hailstorms on the YouTube channel called "Severe Weather Australia" (archived here). A caption on the original video, which shows the same kiddie pool and hose, says the incident took place in October 2020 (archived here). Missouri, March 2025 The sixth recording, of hail piling onto a balcony, inverts and misappropriates a video posted in March by a TikTok user who said it was filmed in St. Louis, Missouri (archived here). "This is what I get for visiting Missouri," the user wrote. Minnesota, July 2023 The eighth clip in the compilation, which is also inverted, shows a hailstorm over a lake in Deer River, Minnesota. Storyful and the Weather Channel both published the footage, dating it to July 2023 (archived here and here). Australia, November 2019 The ninth clip, of ice chunks pounding a pool deck, also appears in the YouTube montage of hailstorm videos from "Severe Weather Australia" (archived here). A text overlay places the footage in Palmview, a locality in Queensland, in November 2019. Australia, December 2017 The tenth video is similarly lifted from the "Severe Weather Australia," which published it to Facebook in December 2017 and later included it as part of its Australian hailstorms compilation on YouTube (archived here and here). The Facebook post says the footage was captured in Oakley, another town in Queensland. Arkansas, June 2023 The 11th visual being misrepresented online, which shows frozen rain smacking against the hood of a truck, was first posted to TikTok in June 2023 (archived here). A hashtag on the TikTok post says it took place in Arkansas. An article about the video on GM Authority, a website for General Motors fans, further specifies that the location was Hot Springs (archived here). Calgary, August 2024 The 13th clip in the compilation has been online since August 2024, when a TikTok user shared it in connection with a hailstorm in Calgary, a city in Alberta, Canada (archived here). Texas, May 2020 The 14th shot is an inverted version of footage uploaded to to a storm-chasing YouTube channel in May 2020 (archived here). The caption says a thunderstorm produced large hail near Quanah, Texas, along Oklahoma Highway 6 north of the Red River. A search of the area on Google Street View uncovered what appears to be a matching street sign (archived here). AFP has debunked other misinformation about weather here.