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Typhoon rips off roofs, floods villages and displaces thousands in Philippines

Schools and workplaces were shut and nearly 16,000 people evacuated from villages on Fuga Island as Typhoon Doksuri approached.

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Typhoon Doksuri slammed into an island in the Philippines and lashed northern provinces with ferocious wind and rain on Wednesday, displacing nearly 16,000 villagers as it blew tin roofs off rural houses, flooded low-lying villages and knocked out power, officials said.

There were no immediate reports of casualties after the typhoon hit Fuga Island off Aparri town in Cagayan province, where 15,843 people were evacuated from high-risk coastal villages.

Schools and workplaces were shut down as a precaution as Doksuri approached.

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Coast guard offices move a fallen tree in Claveria, Cagayan province, northern Philippines (Philippine Coast Guard/AP)

Doksuri weakened slightly but remained dangerous and lethal with sustained winds of 109mph (175kph) and gusts of up to 149mph (240kph).

It was blowing over the coastal waters of the Babuyan Islands in Luzon Strait off Aparri town on Wednesday morning, forecasters said.

Cagayan Governor Manuel Mamba told the Associated Press by telephone: “Our northern coastal towns are being battered. I’m receiving reports of tin roofs being blown away and flooding that could not drain out probably because of tidal surges coming in from the sea.”

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A police officer looks at landslide damage caused by Typhoon Doksuri in a residential area of Baguio City, northern Philippines (AP)

At least four towns lost power due to the onslaught and six bridges were impassable due to flooding, Cagayan officials said in an initial damage report.

An advisory from the country’s weather bureau said “violent, life-threatening conditions are expected to continue” on Wednesday over north-western Cagayan and the outlying Babuyan Islands as well as the northern mountainous regions of Apayao and Ilocos Norte provinces.

Coast guard personnel used rubber boats and ropes to evacuate villagers, who were trapped by brownish, waist-level floodwaters in their houses in a village in Bacarra town in Ilocos Norte.

More than 3,700 inter-island ferry passengers and cargo truck drivers, along with nearly 100 passenger and cargo vessels and motor bancas, were stranded in several ports where a no-sail order was imposed, the Philippine coast guard said.

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Rescuers use a rubber boat to evacuate residents to higher ground in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte province, northern Philippines (Philippine Coast Guard/AP)

The typhoon has been enhancing seasonal monsoon rains in central and northern provinces, including in the densely populated capital region of metropolitan Manila.

It was forecast to move away from the northern Philippines on Thursday and barrel north-westwards to graze past Taiwan’s south-western coast before hitting south-eastern China later this week.

Although it is not poised for a direct hit, Doksuri’s outer bands brought heavy rain and strong winds to Taiwan’s eastern coast on Wednesday.

Trains were cancelled between Kaohsiung and Taitung cities in the south, while ferries to outlying islands have also been suspended.

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Typhoon Doksuri ripped off roofs from homes, flooded low-lying village and knocked out power (Philippine Coast Guard/AP)

Meanwhile, Taiwan has continued to hold its annual Han Kuang military exercises.

The military carried out its first-ever drill at the civilian Taoyuan International Airport on Wednesday morning, according to local media.

The drill stopped air traffic for an hour while the military simulated stopping an invasion targeted at the airport.

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