MANILA
JUNE 21 2008 09:53h
Text
VideoIt`s dead on the water but we can`t get to it because of big waves.
Typhoon Fengshen killed at least 17 people in floods and landslides in the Philippines and left a ferry adrift with over 700 passengers and crew on Saturday.
The Princess of the Stars stalled in rough seas near Sibuyan island in the central Philippines with 626 passengers and 121 crew on board, officials said.
"It's dead on the water but we can't get to it because of big waves," said a coast guard spokesman. The boat left Manila on Saturday morning for the central province of Cebu.
In the southern Philippines, 10 people drowned and five were missing after a river burst its banks in Maguindanao province. In Cotabato City, a man and a child were buried in a landslide at a rubbish dump, police said. Five other people were also drowned.
Fengshen, with winds gusting up to 195 kph (121 mph), is moving through the centre of the Southeast Asian country and is expected to exit on Sunday and head north towards Taiwan, according to storm tracker website www.tropicalstormrisk.com.
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered clean-up and rescue operations before her departure for an 8-day state visit to the United States.
In the south, the navy used motorised rubber boats to rescue residents stranded in chest-deep water.
Fengshen, the sixth typhoon to hit the Philippines this year, tore up trees and power lines across wide swathes of the country. Flights were cancelled and ships kept in harbour.
In Boracay, the Philippines' top holiday island, tourists deserted the white beach and headed for bars and restaurants.
"We have assured people we will be able to get them out tomorrow," said Jay Paraoan, a hotel worker.
Heavy rain drenched Manila and rescue crews were at the ready in case of flooding.
"We'll sleep overnight at the emergency centre," Metro Manila Development Authority general manager Roberto Nacianceno told local radio.
About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, triggering flooding and mass evacuations. Environmental groups blame illegal logging for making flooding worse, particularly in the central Philippines, where more than 5,000 people were killed in 1991 by floodwaters triggered by a typhoon.
In February 2006, 1,000 people were buried when a mudslide from a barren mountain submerged a farming village on a central island.
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