Typhoon Durian slams into northern Philippines
Washington and Colorado snowstorms blamed in deaths, injuries and delays
MANILA, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Typhoon Durian slammed into the northern Philippines on Thursday, tearing up trees and leaving thousands stranded, but looked set to skirt Manila as it swept to the south of the capital of 12 million people.
The eastern island of Catanduanes, where the eye of the category 4 typhoon crossed the coast, was cut off after power companies halted operations and mobile phone signals died.
Villagers along the coast were urged to evacuate as disaster officials raised the alert level to maximum and warned of flash floods, landslides and storm surges from Durian, which was one notch below a category 5 "super typhoon".
"We expect these strong winds to blow until early evening," said Jesse Robredo, mayor of Naga City in the Bicol region. "The winds are uprooting trees and causing roofs to fly."
Durian, packing winds of up to 190 kph (120 mph) and gusts of 225 kph (140 mph), was expected to hit resort areas in Batangas province and Mindoro island, south of the capital, before weakening as it moved west into the South China Sea.
"There was a big change in direction," said weather services chief Nathaniel Cruz. "Manila will no longer be a direct hit."
Still, Cruz warned the capital's residents to prepare for heavy rain and strong winds.
Named after a pungent and spiky Asian fruit, Durian is the fourth typhoon to hit the Philippines in three months.
In September, 213 people were killed when Typhoon Xangsane battered the north and centre of the country, leaving millions without electricity or running water for days.
Xangsane also killed dozens in Vietnam but it was unclear whether Durian would hit that country after the Philippines.
STORM DAMAGE
Luzon island, where Manila is located, is the country's most populated region, its business hub and the main growing area for rice and coconuts.
The recent run of typhoons damaged crops, transport links and power lines, dragging down third-quarter economic growth.
There were concerns about electricity supplies in the wake of Durian as Batangas province is home to three generation plants that serve the capital and surrounding areas.
But First Gen Corp, owner of two of the plants, said there were no plans for a shutdown and that the company was ready for an emergency.
The third plant is owned by a joint venture of National Power Corp and Korea Electric and Power Corp.
Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corp, a unit of Royal Dutch Shell, said its refinery in Batangas that processes 110,000 barrels of oil per day would continue running despite the typhoon.
Northwest Airlines cancelled flights to Japan and some domestic air travel was cut. Ferry passengers were stranded south of Manila after the coast guard ordered vessels to port.
Children were given the day off school in Manila and surrounding provinces on Thursday, with the heavy weather likely to disrupt travel plans over a long holiday weekend.
Storms regularly hit the Philippines. In the worst disaster in recent years, more than 5,000 people died on the central island of Leyte in 1991 in floods triggered by a typhoon.
In 2004, a series of storms left about 1,800 people dead or missing, including 480 who were killed when mudslides buried three towns in Quezon, an eastern province.
Washington and Colorado snowstorms blamed in deaths, injuries and delays
SEATTLE (AP) — A new storm headed into Washington state Wednesday as the region shivered in the aftermath of unusually heavy rain and snow that caused traffic nightmares and power outages.
The stormy weather has been linked to two deaths in Washington, and another snowstorm in Colorado has been blamed for at least five deaths.
Winter storm warnings were issued for much of Washington into Thursday with up to a foot of new snow possible in the Cascade Range. One to 6 inches was predicted for the central Puget Sound area, including Seattle, the National Weather Service said.
While much of the eastern third of the nation basked in readings in the 60s and 50s Wednesday, overnight temperatures in western Washington plunged into the low 20s.
Additional precipitation could break Seattle's one-month precipitation record — 15.33 inches set in December 1933 when the official reporting station was at the old downtown Federal Building. As of early Wednesday the weather service had recorded 15.26 inches for November at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
Two 16-year-old boys were found dead Tuesday in a garage east of Port Angeles in the Upper Peninsula, apparently the victims of carbon monoxide poisoning. They apparently were trying to refuel a portable generator used to supply power during a storm-caused blackout, said Jim Borte, a spokesman for the Clallam County sheriff's office.
In Colorado, at least five people were dead after a wintry storm dropped up to 2 feet of snow in the mountains and turned the morning commute into an icy crawl for drivers in Denver, Colorado Springs and Boulder on Wednesday.
Slick roads contributed to the crash of a minivan that authorities suspect was being used to smuggle illegal immigrants Tuesday night about 20 miles west of Denver, leaving four dead and up to 11 injured. The State Patrol initially said weather did not appear to be a factor.
The van lost control on a curve, struck a tree and rolled, the patrol said.
The driver, Jose Francisco Franco-Rodriguez, 23, fled on foot but was captured. He is being held for investigation of human smuggling careless driving resulting in death, Idaho Springs Police Chief Dave Wohlers said.
A 10-year-old boy was killed Tuesday night when a pickup skidded off a snow-packed highway about 55 miles north of Denver and rolled.
World Cup organizers canceled a men's downhill practice at the Beaver Creek resort near Vail, saying the racers — who can exceed 70 mph — couldn't see far enough in the heavy snowfall. They also cited the threat of avalanches.
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