Death toll rises to 45 in storm-hit Philippines

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Residents wade through a flooded street after heavy rain at Candaba town, Pampanga province, north of Manila, December 17, 2015. Nine people were killed and hundreds spent the night huddled on their roofs in the central Philippines as floods generated by a powerful typhoon inundated villages, disaster officials said on Wednesday. REUTERS/Czar Dancel EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES.

The death toll from two storms which battered the Philippines rose to 45 Sunday as several towns remained under water and rain kept falling in northern regions, disaster monitoring officials said.

The rain was caused by a cold front, dragged into the country by Typhoon Melor and Tropical Depression Onyok which hit the Philippines in succession last week.

Floods almost three metres (nine feet) deep covered some riverside areas north of the capital Manila as heavy rain kept falling, civil defence offices said. “Our home has been flooded up to the waist. It has been flooded for over two days,” said Mary Jane Bautista, 35, in the industrial town of Calumpit 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of the capital.

Her family and several others were forced to take refuge on nearby high ground—in front of a church where their only shelter is the awning over the entrance.

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  1. Torrential rains brought the Philippine capital to a standstill, submerging some areas in waist-deep floodwaters and making streets impassable to vehicles while thousands of people across coastal and mountainous northern regions fled to emergency shelters.

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