International

At Least 14 Dead After Storm Yagi Strikes Across Northern Philippines

 Tropical Storm Yagi swept past Paoay town in Ilocos Norte province into the South𓆏 China Sea with sustained winds of up to 75 kilometers per hour.

Storm yagi causes devastation across northern Philippines |
Storm yagi causes devastation across nortಞhern Philippineꦬs | Photo: AP
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A fierce storm was blowing out of the northern Phi﷽🌄lippines Tuesday after leaving at least 14 people dead in landslides, floods and swollen rivers, disaster-response officials said.

Tropical Storm Yagi swept past Paoay town in Ilocos Norte province into the🦂 South China Sea with sustained winds of up to 75 kilometers (47 miles) per hour and gusts of up to 125 kph (78 mph), according to the weather bureau.

It was forecast to strengthen into a typ༒hoon as♐ it barrels northwestward over the sea toward southern China.

Storm warnings remained in most northern Philippine provꦫinces🐠, where residents were warned of the lingering danger of landslides in rain-soaked mountain villages and floodings in the farming lowlands of Luzon, the country's most populous region.

Locally called Enteng, Yagi enhanced seasonal monsoon rains and unleashed downpours across Luzon, inclꦚuding in the densely populated capital region, metไropolitan Manila, where classes and government work remained suspended Tuesday.

At least 14 people died in landslides, floods𝕴 and swollen rivers in northern and central provinces, including in Antipolo, a popular Roman Catholic pilgrimage city and tourism destination west of Manila where at least three residents, including a pregnant woman, died in a hillside landslide that buried shanties and four others drowned in creeks and rivers, Antipolo's disaster-mitigation officer Enrilito Bernardo Jr. told The Associated Press by telephone.

Four other villager⛦s remained missing after their house was swept away in the deluge, Bernardo saidꦫ.

Thousands o𒁃f travelers were stranded on Monday after sea travel was temporarily halted in several ports and 34 domestic flights were suspended due to the stormy weather.

A training ship, M/V Kamilla — which was anchored in Manila Bay off the Navotas port in the capital — was hit by another vessel that veered out ofജ control due to rough waves. Kamilla's bridge was damaged and it later caught fire, prompting its 18 cad🙈ets and crewmembers to abandon the ship, the Philippine coast guard said.

A passing🦩 tugboat rescued 17 of those who abandoned ꧙the ship and one swam to safety, the coast guard said.

About 20 typhoons and storms batter the Philippines each year. The archipelago lies in the so-ca⛄lled “Pacific Ring of Fire,” a region along most of the Pacific Ocean rim where many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur, making the Southeast Asian nation one of the world's most disaster-prone.