Philippine capital braces for typhoon

  08 December 2014    Read: 1139
Philippine capital braces for typhoon
The Philippine capital of Manila is bracing for the arrival Tuesday of Typhoon Hagupit, as it continues to slowly move through the Philippines.
Schools have been suspended, the stock market is closed, many office and government workers have been told to stay at home and dozens of commercial flights have been canceled.

The storm further weakened Monday after making landfall late Saturday night, tearing roofs off buildings, knocking out power in entire coastal provinces and leaving at least three people dead.

Forecasters say Hagupit, which was moving northwesterly at only about 10 kilometers per hour, may take three days to cross the central Philippines.

Authorities say this typhoon does not appear as destructive as last year`s Typhoon Haiyan, in part because of a massive operation that evacuated nearly 1 million people from coastal and landslide-prone areas.

Typhoon Haiyan killed more than 7,300 people and brought some of the strongest winds ever recorded on land.

Thousands of victims of Haiyan are still living in tents, a year after it took roughly the same path as the current typhoon.

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