Hundreds flee floods as super typhoon brushes past Philippines

The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 major storms each year that kill hundreds of people. (AFP)
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Updated 27 August 2023
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Hundreds flee floods as super typhoon brushes past Philippines

  • The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 major storms each year
  • Weather service says main threat is from heavy rain that could trigger flash floods or landslides

MANILA: More than a thousand people fled their homes as floods unleashed by Super Typhoon Saola swept through mainly rural villages in the northern Philippines, rescue officials said Sunday.
Saola brushed past the northeast of the main island of Luzon overnight Saturday and continued south just off the Pacific coast packing winds of up to 185 kilometers (115 miles) per hour, the state weather bureau said.
No casualties or substantial damage have been reported.
Residents of coastal communities vulnerable to high winds and large waves were moved to higher ground on Isabela province’s Pacific coast, as were those on the northern tip of Cagayan province to the north and Ilocos Sur province on Luzon’s northwest coast, officials said.
“These coastal towns have no protection because they are directly facing the Pacific,” said Isabela rescue official Constante Foronda, putting the number of evacuees in Isabela at 372.
“It’s raining constantly but the winds are not that strong,” he told AFP by telephone, adding: “We got lucky.”
The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 major storms each year that kill hundreds of people and keep vast regions in perpetual poverty.
In neighboring Cagayan, rescue official Ruelie Rapsing said 388 people were evacuated overnight amid flooding on several coastal municipalities on Luzon’s northeast tip.
There were also widespread electricity cuts across the province of 1.2 million people due to downed power lines, he added.
The provincial government’s press office released photos on its Facebook page of knee-deep floodwaters swamping homes in the municipality of Aparri.
The civil defense office in Manila also reported the evacuation of 421 people from four municipalities in Ilocos Sur, which were hit by a landslide, flooding and overflowing rivers.
The eye of Saola was within 90 kilometers of the remote coastal town of Casiguran at 2:00 p.m. (0600 GMT) but was forecast to remain over water over the next few hours before turning east then northwest toward Taiwan in the coming days.
The weather service said the main threat was from heavy rain that could trigger flash floods or landslides.
Up to 200 millimeters (nearly eight inches) of rain was forecast to fall along Cagayan and Isabela’s coasts over the next 24 hours.


Fatal ICE shooting of Minneapolis activist sets stage for national protests

Updated 7 sec ago
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Fatal ICE shooting of Minneapolis activist sets stage for national protests

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Over 1,000 ‘ICE Out’ rallies planned across US

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Minnesota launches inquiry separate from federal probe

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Agent’s own video heightens contradictory accounts of shooting

MINNEAPOLIS: Civil liberties and migrant-rights groups called for nationwide rallies on Saturday to protest the fatal shooting of an activist in Minnesota by a US immigration agent, as state authorities opened their own investigation of the killing.
Protest organizers said more than 1,000 weekend events were planned across the country demanding an end to ​large-scale deployments of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents ordered by President Donald Trump, mostly to cities led by Democratic politicians.
Minneapolis became a major flashpoint of the Republican president’s militarized deportation roundups on Wednesday, when an ICE officer shot and killed a 37-year-old mother of three, Renee Good, behind the wheel of her car on a residential street.
The violence came soon after some 2,000 federal officers were dispatched to Minneapolis in what ICE’s parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, called the “largest DHS operation ever.” Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat, condemned the deployment as a “reckless” example of “governance by reality TV.”

CONFLICTING NARRATIVES OF KILLING
On Friday night, throngs of demonstrators staged a “noise protest” outside a Minneapolis hotel believed to be lodging a visiting contingent of ICE agents.
Video posted by activists on social media showed protesters, some wearing brightly colored inflatable costumes, creating a din by beating on drums, banging pots and pans, yelling through bullhorns and blowing on brass instruments and whistles. Others directed high-power flashlight beams at the hotel’s windows. The crowd thinned after yellow-vested state police in riot gear ‌marched into the area ‌and declared an unlawful assembly, CNN reported.
Police were responding to “information that demonstrators were no longer peaceful and reports of ‌damage ⁠to property,” ​the Minnesota Department ‌of Public Safety said on X. “Dispersal orders were given prior to arrests.”
At the time she was killed, Good was participating in one of numerous “neighborhood patrols” that track, monitor and record ICE activities, according to family and local activists.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other Trump administration officials said Good was “impeding” and “stalking” ICE agents all day, and that the officer opened fire in self-defense when she tried to ram her car into him in an “act of domestic terrorism.”
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, pointed to bystander video he said directly contradicted the federal government’s “garbage narrative.” Civil liberties advocates said the video showed federal agents lacked any justification for using deadly force.
Amid the sharply differing accounts of the shooting, Minnesota and Hennepin County law enforcement authorities said on Friday they were opening their own criminal inquiry of the incident separate from a federal investigation led by the FBI.
Some Trump administration officials, including Vice President JD Vance, asserted state prosecutors lack jurisdiction to ⁠charge a federal officer with a crime, though legal experts say federal immunity in such cases is not automatic.
The crisis atmosphere led Walz — a prominent Trump antagonist who branded Trump and his Republican allies as “weird” during his own ‌run for vice president last year — to put the state’s National Guard on alert.
Federal-state tensions escalated further ‍on Thursday when a US Border Patrol agent in Portland, Oregon, shot and wounded ‍a man and woman in their car after an attempted vehicle stop. As in the Minneapolis incident, DHS said the driver had tried to “weaponize” his vehicle and ‍run over agents.
DHS on Friday identified the wounded driver and passenger as suspected gang associates from Venezuela who were in the US illegally. The agency said the woman had been involved in a prior shootout in Portland but provided no evidence of its allegations against the pair.

VIDEO EVIDENCE EMERGES
Portland Mayor Keith Wilson, echoing Frey, said he could not be sure the government’s account was grounded in fact without an independent investigation.
The deployment of agents to Minneapolis follows Trump’s recent denunciations of Walz and his state’s large population of Somali immigrants over allegations of fraud dating back to 2020 by ​some nonprofit groups administering childcare and other social-service programs.
Good was shot dead just a few blocks from where George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer crushing his neck into the pavement with his knee during a videotaped arrest in May 2020. Floyd’s death sparked months of ⁠nationwide racial-justice protests during Trump’s first term in office.
Bystander video of the Minneapolis incident showed masked officers approaching Good’s Honda SUV while it was stopped at a perpendicular angle to the street, partially blocking traffic.
One agent is seen ordering her out of the car and grabbing onto the driver-side front door handle as the car pulls forward and steers away from the officers, one of whom jumps back and fires three shots into the front of the vehicle as it rolls past.
Video filmed by the officer who opened fire, identified through official comment and public records as Jonathan Ross, shows Good appearing calm. She is heard telling him, “That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you” — moments before he opens fire as she drives forward into the street, steering the car away from him.
Noem has said he was treated at a local hospital for unspecified injuries and released.
The car’s front bumper appears in the bystander video to pass Ross before he shot at Good. It is unclear from any of the footage whether the vehicle made contact with him.
In any case, Ross is shown remaining on his feet and can be seen walking after the incident, contradicting Trump’s assertion on social media that the woman “ran over the ICE officer.”
The two DHS-related shootings this week have drawn thousands of protesters to the streets of Minneapolis, Portland and other US cities, with many more demonstrations under the banner “ICE Out For Good” planned for Saturday and Sunday.
The rallies were being organized by ‌a coalition of groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, MoveOn Civic Action, Voto Latino, and Indivisible, some of which were at the forefront of “No Kings” protests against Trump last year. (Reporting by Renee Hickman in Minneapolis and Nathan Layne in New York; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman; Additional reporting by Jonathan Allen, Joseph Ax and Maria Tsvetkova in New York and Brad ‌Brooks in Colorado; Editing by William Mallard)