The death toll from heavy rains and floods that devastated parts of the Philippines over Christmas has risen to 25, with 26 others still missing, the national disaster response agency said Wednesday.
Nearly 400,000 people were affected, with over 81,000 still in shelters and nine others injured, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said.
Sixteen of the 25 deaths were reported in the Northern Mindanao region in the south, while 12 of the 26 missings are from the eastern Bicol region, the council added.
A shear line — where warm and cold air meet — triggered rains in eastern, central and southern Philippines, the state weather bureau PAGASA said.
The weather disturbance disrupted the Christmas celebrations in affected provinces, with photos from the southern province of Misamis Occidental showing rescuers carrying an elderly woman on a plastic chair as they waded through a flooded street. Some residents in the province were seen hanging on to floaters as coast guard rescuers pulled them across chest-deep flood using a rope.
While the effect of the shear line has weakened, a new low pressure area may bring moderate to heavy rains within the next 24 hours to the same areas affected by the Christmas weekend floods. The weather bureau said Wednesday that flooding and landslides are likely, especially in areas with significant prior rainfall.
Each year about 20 typhoons and storms batter the Philippines, one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries. The archipelago is located on the “Ring of Fire” along the Pacific Ocean’s rim, where many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur.