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Philippines starts cleanup after typhoon Kalmaegi kills at least 85

Residents in the central Philippines began scrubbing mud off streets and houses that were still standing after the typhoon Kalmaegi tore through the area, killing at least 85 people and leaving dozens of others missing.

As floodwaters receded in Cebu, the province that was hardest hit, scenes of destruction were revealed. Homes reduced to rubble and vehicles overturned, streets choked by debris, lives upended.

Marlon Enriquez, 58, of Cebu City tried to salvage the belongings left in his home by scraping off the thick mud.

This was the first flood that we have experienced. "I've lived here for 16 years, and this was the first flood I've ever experienced," he said.

HELICOPTER CRASH DEADLINES

Not everyone has a home to go back to.

Eilene Oken, 38, walked into her old neighbourhood in Talisay and found it completely destroyed.

She said with a broken voice, "We saved and worked for years for this, then it all disappeared in an instant." Oken, however, said that she is grateful for the safety of her family members, including her daughters.

Six military personnel were among the 85 people killed when their helicopter crashed on Mindanao's island, Agusan del sur, during a mission to provide humanitarian aid. The agency for disasters reported that 75 people were missing and 17 others injured.

Kalmaegi (locally called Tino) has been devastated by a magnitude 6,9 earthquake that struck northern Cebu in late January, causing dozens of deaths and thousands to be displaced.

Storm expected to gain strength

The storm submerged many homes, causing widespread flooding and power failures. Over 200,000 people in the Visayas area, which includes parts of southern Luzon as well as northern Mindanao, were evacuated.

Forecasts predict that Kalmaegi will gain strength as it passes over the South China Sea. The typhoon is now on its way to Vietnam, where preparations have begun ahead of Friday's anticipated landfall.

China's state broadcaster CCTV warned that a "catastrophic tsunami process" was taking place in the South China Sea, and activated a maritime disaster emergency response program in Hainan province in its most southern region.

The report released on Wednesday didn't specify which parts of the coast or sea would be affected. However, China claims several islands in these vast waters including the Spratly Islands, and the Paracel Islands, which are administered, it claims, by the provincial government of Hainan.

Super Typhoon Ragasa, which swept through the Philippines in September, forced schools and government offices shut as it brought torrential rainfall and fierce winds.

(source: Reuters)