Thousands evacuate as Philippines braces for typhoon Hagupit

Updated 07 December 2014
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Thousands evacuate as Philippines braces for typhoon Hagupit

MANILA: Tens of thousands of people fled coastal villages and landslide-prone areas in the central Philippines on Friday, as typhoon Hagupit bore down on eastern coasts of the island nation where thousands were killed in a devastating storm last year.
Ports were shut across the archipelago, leaving more than 2,000 travelers stranded in the capital Manila, the central Bicol region and Mindanao island in the south, after the coast guard suspended sea travel ahead of the typhoon.
Philippine Airlines and Cebu Pacific canceled some of their flights to central and southern Philippines.
Areas yet to recover from last year’s category 5 “super typhoon” Haiyan, also known in the Philippines as Typhoon Yolanda, could be in the firing line again, the local weather bureau said.
“It’s better to evacuate early...We don’t want to experience what we went through during Yolanda,” said Gigi Calne, a housewife seeking shelter with about 3,000 others at a school in Basey, in Samar province, in central Philippines.
“It was difficult to save our family and ourselves because we moved too late.”
Haiyan, one of the strongest typhoons ever to make landfall, left more than 7,000 dead or missing and more than 4 million homeless or with damaged houses when it tore through the central Philippines in November 2013.
Hagupit was churning slowly across the Pacific on Friday, with the eye of the storm around 435 km (270 miles) southeast of the Philippines, the weather bureau said, packing winds of up to 215 kph (130 mph) near the center with gusts of up to 250 kph.
It was expected to slam into Eastern Samar or Northern Samar provinces in the central Philippines on Saturday afternoon, bringing torrential rain and 4- to 5-meter high storm surges, the weather bureau said.
About 10 million residents of the Bicol and Eastern Visayas regions of the central Philippines are at risk of flooding, storm surges and strong winds. AccuWeather Global Weather Center said more than 30 million people would feel the impact of the typhoon across the Philippines.
Eastern Samar and the island of Leyte were worst-hit by 250 kph winds and storm surges brought by Haiyan. About 25,000 people still live in tents, shelters and bunkhouses more than a year later.
In Tacloban City, Leyte, which accounted for about half of the death toll from Haiyan, about 19,000 people from coastal villages thronged into 26 evacuation centers, said Ildebrando Bernadas of the city’s disaster office.
“We are expecting to double that once we implement forced evacuations,” Bernadas said, adding about 95 percent of residents from coastal areas have been evacuated.
While the local weather bureau and the Japan Meteorological Agency predicted Hagupit making a direct hit on the central Philippines, Tropical Storm Risk, which tracks cyclones, and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center of the US Navy showed the storm veering north, closer to the capital Manila.
Mario Montejo, the Philippines Science and Technology Secretary, said the differences in the forecasting models were due to methodologies used, but said the actual track of the typhoon hews close to the local weather bureau’s model.
Tropical Storm Risk downgraded the typhoon to a category 4 on Friday — a level below “super typhoon” but still a very powerful storm — and forecast it would have weakened to category 3 by the time it made landfall.

(Additional reporting by Jazmin Bonifacio in Samar and Neil Jerome Morales in Manila)


Brazil Senate approves bill to cut Bolsonaro’s 27-year sentence for coup plot

Updated 5 sec ago
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Brazil Senate approves bill to cut Bolsonaro’s 27-year sentence for coup plot

  • he bill was approved by the lower house last week and now goes to Lula

BRASILIA: Brazil’s Senate approved on Wednesday a bill to shorten the 27-year prison sentence of former President Jair Bolsonaro, although it is likely to face resistance from the Supreme Court and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
The bill was approved by the lower house last week and now goes to Lula, who has not said whether he will sign it into law or veto it. It could cut the former president’s prison term to just over two years.
The text also establishes sentence reductions for those convicted for their roles in a January 2023 riot, when Bolsonaro supporters invaded and ransacked the presidential palace, Supreme Court and Congress.
“This is part of our path to peace, and we must all celebrate it,” said Senator Esperidiao Amin, the bill’s sponsor in the Senate, following its approval in a 48-25 vote.
Last month, Bolsonaro began serving his sentence for plotting a coup against Lula after losing the 2022 election.
A preliminary version of the bill put forward by opposition right-wing lawmakers would have pardoned those involved in “political demonstrations” after Lula’s election, but the bill’s sponsor in the lower house ruled out granting them full amnesty.
About 2,000 people were arrested over the Brasilia attack, which drew comparisons to the January 2021 attack on the US Capitol in Washington. Many of those in Brazil have been convicted by the Supreme Court of attempting a coup, among other crimes.
“The government is against this proposal... for reasons that are already known: those who have attacked democracy must pay for their crimes,” Institutional Relations Minister Gleisi Hoffmann said in a post on X ahead of the vote.
Lula previously said that he would wait for the bill to “get to his desk” before a decision on whether to sign it into law, adding he would take “the best decision for Brazil.”
The bill was amended during an earlier vote on Wednesday in a Senate committee to make it clear that sentence reductions will only apply to those involved in acts related to the attempted coup, and not to other crimes.
Amin argued that the change did not force the bill to return to the lower house, as it was a simple adjustment to the wording.