MANILA, Philippines — Hundreds of thousands of people across a wide stretch of the Philippines sought refuge Friday in churches, schools and other makeshift evacuation centers as the island nation braced for another a powerful typhoon.
MANILA, Philippines — Hundreds of thousands of people across a wide stretch of the Philippines sought refuge Friday in churches, schools and other makeshift evacuation centers as the island nation braced for another a powerful typhoon.
About 50 provinces covering more than half the archipelago could be at risk from Typhoon Hagupit, including many communities that were devastated by last year’s deadly Typhoon Haiyan, officials said.
Hagupit was expected to make landfall late Saturday, probably on the eastern island of Samar.
Forecasters differed on the route that it could take from there, with the state weather agency predicting it would cut across the country’s central islands, and the U.S. military’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center suggesting a more northerly route that could include the southern outskirts of the capital, Manila.
Although the storm appeared to be weakening as it approached the coast, officials warned it could still bring dangerous winds, rain and storm surges. On Friday, local meteorologists clocked gusts of 143 mph.
The Department of Social Welfare and Development said at least half a million people had fled their homes, and there were plans to move more ahead of the storm, which is known in the Philippines as Ruby.
Fred Padernos, a father of five in Tacloban, the city hit hardest by Haiyan, said his family was sheltering in a four-story building, where they had rented space with others.
Last year, Haiyan’s tsunami-like storm surges trapped the family on the second floor of their home.
“Luckily I was able to save my family,” he said. “But I was hurt emotionally and very depressed, because I really saw the danger before my eyes, that any moment we could die.”
By Friday evening, the weather was ominous.
“We are feeling the strong wind already. It comes very quickly and goes away again and comes back,” he said. “Sometimes it creates very small whirlwinds. And then the clouds are getting thick already and dark, and rains are pouring down and stop and then pour down again. It’s very abnormal.”
Government officials and international aid organizations said they had learned lessons from Haiyan, which destroyed about 1 million homes, displaced 4 million people and left more than 7,300 dead and missing.
“Nobody is taking any chances this time — not the government, the population or the international agencies,” said Bradley Mellicker, of the International Organization for Migration. “Everyone remembers what happened last year and are preparing to the greatest extent they can.”
In Tacloban, Mayor Alfred S. Romualdez said he had suspended school and was encouraging workers from other areas to return home to bring the city’s population to a more manageable level. Numbers swell from about 240,000 up to 1 million people during the work day, he said.
Romualdez estimated that 95 percent of the people living in vulnerable coastal communities had relocated to evacuation centers.
“They know because of experience that they don’t want to get caught flat-footed and don’t want to rely on outside help, so the best way is to prepare,” Romualdez said. “They are very attentive and monitoring the bulletins.”
Unlike last year, rescue and debris clearance vehicles were moved to protect them from storm surges, and police and military reinforcements were deployed ahead of the typhoon, he said.
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(Special correspondent De Leon reported from Manila and Times staff writer Zavis from Los Angeles.)