Manila: A typhoon blew closer on Wednesday to a northeastern Philippine region still struggling to recover from a powerful storm that left a trail of death and destruction just over a week ago, officials said, adding that thousands of villagers were being evacuated again to safety.
Typhoon Vamco gained strength with sustained winds of 135 kilometres (84 miles) per hour and gusts of up to 165 kph (102 mph) before it was forecast to slam ashore into the Polillo Islands in Quezon province on Wednesday night or early Thursday.
One of the strongest typhoons in the world this year, Goni left more than 30 people dead or missing and damaged or destroyed more than 270,000 houses and shanties, many along with coastal villages, officials said.
This typhoon will test once more our spirit, bruised but not broken, military chief of staff Gen. Gilbert Gapay said of the approaching typhoon.
Navy, air force and army forces have remained on high alert from the last typhoon and again deployed disaster-response contingents in high-risk areas ahead of the onslaught, Gapay said in a statement.
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More than 12,000 villagers were moved to evacuation centres on Wednesday and many more were being brought to safer ground, according to the Office of Civil Defense and other officials.
Tens of thousands of others remained displaced after losing their homes in Goni's devastation, including in the hard-hit island province of Catanduanes, where Goni made landfall on Nov. 1 and damaged or destroyed tens of thousands of coastal shanties, houses and buildings, including emergency shelters, and knocked down power and communications.