Death toll in landslides, flood in Philippines rises to 68

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The death toll of landslides and flood triggered by heavy rains in the Philippines has risen to 68, the government agency said on Monday.

The deaths were mostly due to landslides and drowning in the Bicol region and Eastern Visayas in central Philippines, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) in its latest report.

Fifty-seven of the deaths were reported from the Bicol region while 11 from the Eastern Visayas region.

The agency said there are still 19 people missing in both regions.

The Office of Civil Defense in the Bicol region said that so far it has recorded 57 deaths. The 57 deaths include 15 in Albay province, six in Sorsogon province, 23 in Camarines Sur province, six in Camarines Norte province and seven in Masbate province.

The NDRRMC said its offices in the affected regions "are still on alert and are continuously monitoring the on-going response in the affected areas."

Moreover, the agency said that rescuers from the military, the police and other government agencies are now conducting search, rescue and retrieval operations in some areas in northern and central Philippines.

More than 130,000 people from 321 areas in the Philippines have been affected by landslides and widespread flood, according to the disaster agency.

Aside from strong winds and heavy rains, areas ravaged by the tropical depression experienced power outages. Several houses are buried in landslides and roads sections were impassable due to severe flood.

The agency floated the possibility that the death toll will increase as retrieval operations continue.

The Philippine Department of Social Welfare and Development has provided the evacuees with family food packs and other relief goods. The agency also has standby emergency-relief funds worth around 212 million pesos (nearly 4 million U.S. dollars).

The country's national weather bureau earlier warned heavy rains may pour over the northern and central Philippines brought on by the tropical depression, which has already weakened into a low-pressure area after making landfall in Eastern Samar in the central Philippines on Saturday.

Although the low-pressure area already left the Philippines on Sunday, the national weather bureau warned that more rain is expected in the coming days. 

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