World

Typhoon lashes Philippines

08:38 am on 26 December 2016

A typhoon packing gusts of wind up to 255km/h is lashing the eastern Philippines.

More than 200,000 people have gone to evacuation centres following warnings of storm surges and flooding in coastal villages and low-lying areas.

Young people sit in a truck after the local government implemented preemptive evacuations at Barangay Matnog, Daraga, Albay province. Photo: AFP

Nock-Ten hit the coast near Catanduanes island yesterday evening.

Dozens of ports have closed, with warnings of 2m waves.

In October, Super Typhoon Haima hit the country, killing at least four people.

The landfall of Nock-Ten, also known as Nina and the strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines this year, was reported on the Twitter account of Pagasa-Dost, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration.

It issued a local thunderstorm warning and has forecast the typhoon will travel west at 15km/h.

Its sustained winds are currently about 185km/h.

It will pass across the southern area of the main island of Luzon, possibly weakening as it travels close to the capital, Manila, before heading into the South China Sea.

In Manila, officials ordered big roadside advertising boards to be taken down, fearing that strong winds could uproot them and injure people.

There have been fears Filipinos would ignore evacuation warnings to stay at home with family at Christmas, the biggest holiday in the largely Catholic nation.

The strength of the typhoon is equivalent to a Category Three hurricane in the Atlantic, according to the JTWC data, or a Category Two storm based on the information from the Philippines' weather office.

In 2013, super typhoon Haiyan claimed more than 7350 lives.

- BBC