Typhoon Fung-wong batters Philippines
Digest more
At least 40 people have died and hundreds of thousands have been displaced as Typhoon Kalmaegi devastates the Philippines, flooding Cebu and surrounding islands, while a new tropical system threatens to follow.
Typhoon Kalmaegi battered the Philippines, and it's now heading for Vietnam as another potential monster storm grows at sea.
Typhoon Fung-wong made landfall on the main island of Luzon, prompting the evacuation of more than one million people, just days after an earlier storm killed over 200.
Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has declared a state of calamity after Typhoon Kalmaegi, one of the strongest typhoons this year, caused severe flooding in central Philippines, leaving at least 114 dead.
The death toll from Typhoon Kalmaegi in the Philippines has risen to 40, officials said on Tuesday, as the powerful storm unleashed heavy rains and floods across the central region, submerging homes and forcing thousands to evacuate.
Non-profit organizations and the Catholic church in Toronto are raising funds to help people in the Philippines after two typhoons ripped through the country in recent days, killing more than two hundred and displacing more than a million.
Typhoon Kalmaegi has brought fierce winds and torrential rains to Vietnam, and left at least five people dead and thousands of homes damaged before weakening into a tropical storm. The storm
Streets and homes in Taiwan's Yilan County were left inundated with mud and rubble on Wednesday (November 12) after floodwaters swept through residential areas, forcing residents to wade through puddles of water and clear debris from damaged homes.