COTABATO CITY (Updated 2, 3:53 p.m.) — Landslides and flooding killed 31 people as heavy rain from an approaching storm lashed the southern Philippines, a disaster official said Friday.
The storm unleashed flash floods carrying uprooted trees, rocks and mud overnight in mainly rural communities around Cotabato, a city of 300,000 people on Mindanao island.
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Many residents were caught by surprise by the rapidly rising floodwaters, Naguib Sinarimbo, the spokesman and civil defence chief for the regional government, told AFP.
"The water started entering the houses before dawn," Sinarimbo said, confirming that the death toll in the storm-hit areas had risen to 31 from the earlier tally of 13.
Rescuers retrieved 16 bodies from Datu Odin Sinsuat, 10 from Datu Blah Sinsuat and five from Upi town, he told reporters.
Teams in rubber boats had to rescue some residents from rooftops, Sinarimbo added.
Local filmmaker Remar Pablo told AFP he was shooting a beauty pageant in the town of Upi when the floodwaters suddenly came in after midnight and forced audience members to flee for safety.
A row of cars sat half-submerged on the street outside, his clips showed.
"We were stranded inside," said Pablo, who eventually waded into the water to get home.
Rescuers carried a baby in a plastic tub as they waded through chest-deep water, a photo posted by the provincial police showed.
Missing persons
Reports from the Bangsamoro regional government, the Army’s 6th Infantry Division and local government units said the worst hit by flash floods are Maguindanao del Norte's Upi, Sultan Kudarat, Datu Odin Sinsuat, Parang and Datu Blah Sinsuat towns.
Responders from the Rapid Emergency Action on Disaster Incidence, or READi contingent of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, personnel of units under the Army's 6th ID and rescue teams from LGUs and the police have, until past 1:00 p.m. Friday, scrambling to relocate flood-stricken villagers to safe areas.
Mayor Marshall Sinsuat of Datu Blah Sinsuat said four villagers got drowned in waist-deep floodwaters that swept through Barangay Tubuan in their municipality.
A barangay councilor also died in the nearby seaside Barangay Nalkan in Datu Blah Sinsuat, ravaged by rampaging floodwaters from hinterlands.
Sinsuat said LGU emergency responders found dead a villager in Barangay Pura, one of six residents who went missing after flash floods swept through houses in the area.
“We are still searching for the five other missing persons,” Sinsuat said on Friday morning.
'It was a shock'
Floodwaters have receded in several areas, but Cotabato City remained almost entirely waterlogged.
Sinarimbo said there could be more flooding on Friday because of heavy rain.
"Our focus at this time is rescue as well as setting up community kitchens for the survivors," he said.
The army deployed its trucks to collect stranded residents in Cotabato and eight nearby towns, provincial civil defence chief Nasrullah Imam said.
"It was a shock to see municipalities which had never flooded getting hit this time," Imam said, adding that some families were swept away when the waters hit their homes.
The heavy rainfall began late Thursday in the impoverished region, which is under Muslim self-rule after decades of separatist armed rebellion.
The state weather office in Manila said it was partly caused by Tropical Storm Nalgae, which it expects to strengthen at landfall.
Nalgae was now heading toward the northern or central sections of the Philippines, with the state weather service saying it was not ruling out a landfall on Samar island later Friday, much earlier than earlier forecast.
Nearly 5,000 people were evacuated from flood- and landslide-prone communities in these areas, the civil defence office said.
The coast guard also suspended ferry services in much of the archipelago nation where tens of thousands of people board boats each day.
An average of 20 typhoons and storms strike the Philippines each year, killing people and livestock and destroying farms, houses, roads and bridges, although the south is rarely hit.
Scientists have warned that storms are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer because of climate change. — with reports from Philstar.com/John Unson