Mangkhut, known locally as Ompong, has recently been downgraded to a category-4 Atlantic hurricane. It is essentially a huge 900km (560-mile) rain cloud which could, when mixed with seasonal rain, create waves of up to six meters (20ft) on the coasts of Cagayan, weather experts have warned.
Staggering winds of 205kph and extreme rainfall caused some structural damage and cut power to more than four million people across the Cagayan province on Luzon Island, around 300km north of Manila.
Philippine Red Cross✔@philredcrossRoads and crops are immersed in flood in Samoki, Bontoc, Mountain Province. Our team conducts an assessment in the areas affected by #OmpongPH.#TyphoonMangkhut #Mangkhut1:25 AM - Sep 15, 20185667 people are talking about this
Roads and crops are immersed in flood in Samoki, Bontoc, Mountain Province. Our team conducts an assessment in the areas affected by #OmpongPH.#TyphoonMangkhut #Mangkhut
Philippine Red Cross✔@philredcrossLOOK: The intensity of #OmpongPH onslaught can be seen in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte.Photo by Annette Ablan, PRC Board of Director Ilocos Norte.3:37 AM - Sep 15, 20182323 people are talking about this
LOOK: The intensity of #OmpongPH onslaught can be seen in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte.Photo by Annette Ablan, PRC Board of Director Ilocos Norte.
“It can lift cars, you can't stand, you can't even crawl against that wind,” warned Philippines government forecaster Rene Paciente, who also cautioned that even if the typhoon weakens after making landfall, it will still be incredibly destructive.
The victims mostly died in landslides, one of them an infant child who died with their parents after the couple refused to immediately evacuate their high-risk home, according to AP.
At least 40 people have been trapped in a bunkhouse in Itogon, Benguet, Mayor Victorio Palangdan said, as quoted by ABS. Authorities say that the bunkhouse has been buried in a landslide and the people inside are feared dead.
“Almost all of the buildings here have been damaged, the roofs were blown away,” Rogelio Sending, a government official in Tuguegarao, the capital of Cagayan, told Reuters. “There has been no electricity supply... communications were also down."
Hannah Beech@hkbeechTyphoon Mangkhut: trees down on road3:32 PM - Sep 14, 2018 · santiago, ilocos sur8042 people are talking about this
Typhoon Mangkhut: trees down on road
Mike Hudema✔@MikeHudemaMore than 43 million people could be affected by Super Typhoon #Mangkhut, predicted to be most powerful storm since records began and Hong Kong could take direct hit: https://buff.ly/2x9UwcH The warning signs are everywhere. We must act on #climate.#ActOnClimate #energy6:18 PM - Sep 12, 2018707837 people are talking about this
More than 43 million people could be affected by Super Typhoon #Mangkhut, predicted to be most powerful storm since records began and Hong Kong could take direct hit: https://buff.ly/2x9UwcH The warning signs are everywhere. We must act on #climate.#ActOnClimate #energy
READ MORE: Unseen in 35 years: Veteran weather reporter on oceans ‘exploding’ with tropical storms
“We’ve received reports that many trees were uprooted and electric posts toppled and are blocking the roads. This makes the clearing operations really difficult.”
Farmers have scrambling to save their crops from Mangkhut – which struck at the beginning of harvesting season – while those in the typhoon’s path who cannot evacuate have been stocking up on supplies.
Some 105,000 people are staying in temporary shelters after being evacuated in preparation for the storm, which made landfall early on Saturday. The storm is expected to last the weekend in the Philippines before it makes its way to Hong Kong and southeastern China by Monday morning.
Philippine Red Cross✔@philredcrossLOOK: Gasoline station on Luna St. Tuguegarao toppled down by #OmpongPh #TyphoonMangkhut8:04 PM - Sep 14, 20182824 people are talking about this
LOOK: Gasoline station on Luna St. Tuguegarao toppled down by #OmpongPh #TyphoonMangkhut
Hannah Beech@hkbeechanother in a series of smashed gas stations #TyphoonManghkut #TyphoonOMPONGph8:26 PM - Sep 14, 2018 · San Nicolas, Ilocos Region1621 people are talking about this
another in a series of smashed gas stations #TyphoonManghkut #TyphoonOMPONGph
Philippine Red Cross✔@philredcrossThe impact of #OmpongPH.Crops were damaged in Ilagan, Isabela due to intensified rains and winds after the typhoon made its landfall.11:53 PM - Sep 14, 20183822 people are talking about this
The impact of #OmpongPH.Crops were damaged in Ilagan, Isabela due to intensified rains and winds after the typhoon made its landfall.
More than 100,000 residents and tourists in China have been moved or sent home, and more than 3,000 shelters have been organized in preparation for the storm. Hong Kong airline Cathay Pacific said all Sunday flights would be grounded.
Worryingly, the strength of the storm resembles that of Typhoon Haiyan, a natural disaster in 2013 that left 7,300 people dead and more than five million displaced in the central Philippines.
"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)
There used to be a bar in downtown Moscow called Sanctions, featuring caricatures of Western politicians and serving only Russian booze—a one-stop summation of President Vladimir Putin’s attitude toward the efforts of the U.S. and Europe to economically kneecap his country. Putin and his Kremlin-controlled propaganda machine have a history of shrugging off sanctions, despite a 55 percent crash in the value of the ruble, a collapse in foreign investment and rising inflation. Russia, Putin boasts, will always survive the West’s efforts to destroy it.
That narrative will be aggressively tested in the coming months should the U.S. government make good on the harshest economic sanctions ever imposed on Russia.
There are three separate efforts to inflict economic pain. On September 12, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that declared election interference a “national emergency” and authorized sanctions on foreign companies, institutions or individual meddling. The Office of National Intelligence would take charge of assessing any potential interference. Although the executive order isn’t directed solely at Russia—the administration said it was also concerned about China, Iran and North Korea—it was instigated by Russian hacking during the 2016 election, currently being investigated by special counsel Robert Mueller.
Trump’s order was an attempt to forestall Congress, which, on the same day, voted through the first stage of legislation aimed at more severe and pointed punishment of Russian election interference. Trump’s cordiality toward Putin has been startling—as in Helsinki this past July, when he appeared to credit Putin’s denials of election interference over the unanimous conclusions of his own intelligence services. He was also slow to implement an earlier sanctions bill passed by Congress last year.
But with widespread support for a tougher line on Russia in Congress and within Trump’s administration, the U.S. president has been forced to bow to prevailing sentiment. “We felt it was important to demonstrate that the president was taking command of this issue,” national security adviser John Bolton said of Trump’s executive order.
The measures under consideration in Congress—known as the Defending American Security From Kremlin Aggression Act—seek to deter further Russian interference in elections by effectively cutting off the country from the world economy. The proposals include banning major Russian banks from capital markets and freezing overseas acquisitions by Russian gas and oil companies, as well as shutting down Russian botnets and the companies that host them. In addition, there would be an investigation into the personal wealth of Putin and members of the Russian elite.
The bill is set to do more damage to Russia than a “tactical nuclear weapon,” Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Bob Corker of Tennessee, one of the bill’s many Republican supporters, told reporters on August 20. Other Republican supporters include former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who called Trump’s friendliness to Putin in Helsinki “the most serious mistake of his presidency.”
“We are going into a different phase now,” says one senior Obama-era official who was directly involved in drafting sanctions against Moscow between 2014 and 2016, and who is not authorized to speak on the record. “The original intent was to show [Putin] how closely interlinked the Russian economy was to the global economy, not to shut down the Russian economy. The idea was to stop further Russian aggression” in Ukraine. But now, four years on, the political climate in Washington has changed. “After the [2016 electoral] hacking the mood has become ‘Punish Russia as hard as possible. Turn the screws all the way.’”
Donald Trump with Vladimir Putin at their joint press conference in Helsinki, Finland, in July, when the U.S. president supported the Russian leader's denials about election interference.BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GETTY
The congressional effort runs parallel to a third set of sanctions, imposed by the Treasury and State Department on August 22 in response to the attempted nerve-agent poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and three others in Salisbury, England, in March. These are based on a violation of a 1991 U.S. law that requires the president to act against any country that has “used chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law.” The measures require Russia to allow international inspectors into its secret chemical weapons facilities within 90 days or face even more stringent punishment. Effectively, the U.S. is on course to brand Russia a state sponsor of chemical weapons terrorism alongside North Korea and Iran.
As a result, Russia can no longer receive high-tech U.S. goods, such as superfast computers, state-of-the-art oil exploration machinery and lasers. The measure is intended to hit the economy where it hurts the most: in the oil extraction and arms industries.
Russia has already dismissed the idea of allowing inspectors. So come November, the Treasury is expected to turn those screws even tighter, and that could include Iran-style restrictions on Russian banks and companies doing business in the West.
And there’s more: Additional measures under consideration, by both Congress and the Treasury Department, are the sanctioning of Russian local and international sovereign bonds—a third of which are held by foreign investors—and a full-scale investigation into Russian officials’ money abroad. This would be followed by a much wider version of the asset freezes and visa bans already imposed on a handful of Putin cronies by earlier rounds of sanctions.
It might be time to reopen that bar.
The pressure to punish Russia put Trump in a political and diplomatic bind. He seemed to attempt to reposition himself as a hard-liner on Russia in a July tweet, adding a curious prediction: that the Kremlin would again interfere in November’s midterm elections—on the side of Democrats. “I’m very concerned that Russia will be fighting very hard to have an impact on the upcoming Election. Based on the fact that no President has been tougher on Russia than me, they will be pushing very hard for the Democrats,” the president tweeted. “They definitely don’t want Trump!”
Still, the president continues to resist criticizing Putin directly. The warmth he displayed toward the Russian leader in Helsinki was likely instigated by his antipathy toward special counsel Robert Mueller and the ongoing investigation into collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia. For much of the first 200 days of the Trump administration, there were effectively “two separate Russia policies in America—Trump’s and Congress’s,” says Vladimir Vasiliyev of the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute for U.S. and Canadian Studies, a think tank. “It is clear that one is conciliatory and constructive, the other hostile.”
Trump’s signing of the executive order on September 12, therefore, marked a decisive victory for Russia hawks over the president. Instead of the reset of relations Trump promised in Helsinki, the U.S. is heading for all-out economic warfare with Moscow.
Less clear, of course, is how Putin and Russian citizens will respond. Every time Russia has violated international law—by annexing the Ukrainian territory of Crimea in 2014, for instance, or interfering in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections—the U.S. and European Union have announced packages of economic sanctions on the Kremlin. None has put a dent in Putin’s popularity ratings, or changed Russia’s aggressive behavior in Syria, Ukraine or toward the regime’s opponents at home.
Pump jacks in Siberia. Oil and gas account for 70 percent of Russia's total exports.SERGEI KARPUKHIN/REUTERS
Until now, Putin has countered sanctions by blaming a slumping economy on foreign enemies, a narrative pushed at home by the Kremlin’s near-total control of the Russian media landscape. Franz Klintsevich, a member of the Defense Committee of Russia’s upper house of parliament, recently told state television that the sanctions were part of a “multifaceted global plot to destroy Russia.” The Kremlin-controlled media have dismissed economic penalties as ineffective and more damaging to the West than to Russia.
Putin denounced Congress’s proposed Defending American Security bill as “boorish,” “beyond all reasonable bounds” and “absolutely unlawful from the point of view of international law.” He promised that Russia would retaliate. “When will our response follow? What will it be? That will depend on the final version of the draft law, which is now being debated in the U.S. Senate.”
The reaction to the September 12 sanctions included top Russian officials denouncing U.S. “hysteria,” declaring Russia to be mighty enough to go it alone. “Our electronics are far more advanced than America’s,” Sergei Zheleznyak, deputy chairman of the Russian Duma, or lower house of parliament, told Russian television.
In fact, Russia produces no international brands of telephones or computers, and the only airplane it makes, the Sukhoi Superjet, depends on French avionics and engines. Russia’s one major export, accounting for nearly 52 percent of federal income and 70 percent of total exports, is oil and gas, with arms, steel and aluminum making up most of the rest.
A forensic tent where former Russian spy Sergei Skripal was found poisoned in Salisbury, England.PETER NICHOLLS/REUTERS
Russia’s Federation Council, parliament’s upper house, has begun drafting a raft of counter-sanctions that could include banning the export of Russian-made rocket boosters to the U.S. (currently used by NASA to supply to the International Space Station). And Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov threatened on Russian state TV to retaliate against the U.S. by using what he called the “info-component” of Russia’s power, a seeming signal for a new round of interference in U.S. politics by Russian hackers. When pressed to elaborate by the talk show’s host, Ryabkov added cryptically, “Our methods will work. They’ll be effective—I’m certain of that.”
Despite the Kremlin’s downplaying of the impact of sanctions, Washington “undoubtedly has the power to strangle Russia’s economy if it so wishes,” says the Obama-era official. “The question is whether consequences of that are in [America’s] real interests.”
Already, a perfect storm of falling oil prices and Western sanctions has crashed the value of major Russian corporations. In August 2008, Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned energy giant, was valued at $261 billion to Apple’s $131 billion. Ten years later, under pressure from falling energy prices and U.S. and EU sanctions, Gazprom’s market capitalization has fallen to $52 billion, while Apple has become the world’s first trillion-dollar company.
“The quality of life and wealth of ordinary Russians [has] obviously dropped,” says Ilya Zaslavskiy, head of research at the Free Russia Foundation, a Washington, D.C.–based nongovernmental organization.
At the same, he adds, the fortunes of Russia’s oligarchs have remained largely untouched. Putin’s “various confidants that have been targeted [by personal sanctions] still have lots of money in offshore accounts, so they only feel threatened, not bitten.”
Vladimir Putin visits Crimea after Russia annexed the Ukrainian peninsula in 2014.YURI KADOBNOV/AFP/GETTY
So far, the Kremlin’s propaganda machine has allowed Putin to weather the 55 percent drop in the value of the ruble since 2014, as well as rising inflation. His approval figures in late August remained above 80 percent (though unpopular pension reforms, due to the flagging economy, threaten to put a dent in that). A poll by the Pew Research Center that month showed that while 47 percent of Russians believe that sanctions have so far had a “serious” impact on the economy, 58 percent expressed “strong confidence” in Putin’s ability to handle international affairs.
The new U.S. sanctions, however, would likely change that by isolating Russia from the world economy in an unprecedented way. If Congress decides to target overseas projects by Russian state energy giants, the future of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline—a multibillion-dollar partnership between Russia’s gas giant Gazprom and French, Austrian, U.K.-Dutch and German power behemoths—would be in doubt. The pipeline is designed to deliver 55 billion cubic meters of natural gas to Europe under the Baltic Sea, bypassing current transit routes through Ukraine.
The EU is watching carefully. In early August, it imposed sanctions on six Russian construction companies involved in building a vast new bridge linking mainland Russia to the annexed territory of Crimea. If the EU should join the U.S. in harsher sanctions against, for example, Gazprom, it would sink Nord Stream 2.
The Skripal attack has already put the EU on high alert. In early September, the U.K. government announced that police had gathered enough evidence to charge two Russian citizens, identified as officers of Russia’s military intelligence service, the GRU, with the attempted murder of the former spy and his daughter, as well as with violations of chemical weapons laws. The two suspects, who flew back to Russia immediately after the poisoning, claim they were sports nutritionists. (Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova responded that their names “mean nothing to us.”) As the Russian constitution bans extradition of its citizens abroad, there’s little chance the suspects will ever be brought to trial in the U.K.
From the beginning of his rule in 1999, Putin’s power has been based on his image as a strongman defending his country’s interests against a hostile West. Putin has given “every Russian a pride in belonging to a great nation,” says Leonid Gozman, president of the opposition political group Union of Right Forces. “The problem is that this self-image is based on an absolutely false picture of the world. We are surrounded by ‘enemies,’ ‘fascists’ in Kiev…America, who wants to ‘put us on our knees.’ It’s based on a hatred for the whole world—everyone is an enemy.”
That central ideology makes sanctions a tricky bet for U.S. policymakers since they play right into the Russian president’s hands: The more devastating the pressure from the U.S. and EU, the more it bolsters his mythology.
Some of the framers of the earliest rounds of sanctions, put into place by the Obama administration four years ago, believed that going after the assets of Putin’s close circle of oligarchs could force a change of policy. It did not. But those sanctions only targeted a few dozen named individuals. Could penalties applied to the Russian elite as a whole have a better chance of bringing change?
“Unlike the Soviet Politburo, today’s elite not only rules Russia but also owns her,” says Konstantin von Eggert, a commentator on Moscow’s independent, internet-based Dozd TV. They “are welded to the global economy because they live on selling oil, gas, gold and metals to the rest of the world. Their families and children cannot live without penthouses in Miami, private planes, Ferraris and shopping at Selfridges.” The old Politburo, he adds, was “much less vulnerable in the face of American pressure.”
Russian citizens celebrate on March 18, 2015, the annexation of Crimea.ALEXANDER UTKIN/AFP/GETTY
Modern middle-class Russians are more connected to the wider world, through the internet and vacations abroad. And that makes recent attempts by the Kremlin to tighten control over ordinary Russians—by restricting travel, access to the World Wide Web or ownership of overseas assets—far riskier politically. The key is the ability to wait.
As recent U.S. measures against Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have shown, sanctions tend to boost dictators in the short term. In the long term, they have a chance of wearing regimes down, as Iran demonstrated when its leaders agreed to scrap the country’s nuclear program in exchange for a lifting of crippling economic sanctions—a deal that Trump has since scrapped.
Eggers, for one, believes America has the advantage. “A sanctions war is like a long-distance race,” he says. “It will be won by whoever is objectively stronger and more patient. And that, however you look at it, is the United States.”
When it comes to patience, of course, Putin has proved to be a master. The more critical question might be: Can the U.S. Congress and government hold their tough line on Russia in defiance of the least patient president in American history?
(Newsweek)
A total of 491 people were killed in monsoon rains in Kerala since May 29. But, now the flood-hit state has to face a new problem. Giant earth cracks are drying up rivers and wells. Geologists were sent to investigate the strange post-flood phenomenon.
A series of issues including soaring mercury level, unprecedented dip in water level of rivers, sudden drying-up of wells, depletion of groundwater reserves and mass perishing of earthworms have caused widespread concern in various parts of Kerala after the devastating deluge last month.
The flood-battered Wayanand district, known for its rich biodiversity, recently experienced an unprecedented mass die-off of earthworms, causing concern among farmers who attributed it to the rapid drying up of earth and change in soil structure.
Many rivers including Periyar, Bharathapuzha, Pampa and Kabani, which were overflowing during the deadly rains, are now drying up and their water level has decreased abnormally. Besides, wells are also drying up and groundwater reserves diminish at an alarmign rate in many districts.
Here a video showing some cracks after the floods:
The dramatic monsoon floods have altered the topography of the land in many places,probably causing kilometres-long cracks especially in high range areas of Idukki and Wayanad.
After floods, drought conditions have been predicted by experts in many districts of the southern state.
HONG KONG — Typhoon Mangkhut barreled into southern China on Sunday, killing two people after lashing the Philippines with strong winds and heavy rain that left at least 64 dead and dozens more feared buried in a landslide.
More than 2.4 million people had been evacuated in southern China's Guangdong province by Sunday evening to flee the massive typhoon and nearly 50,000 fishing boats were called back to port, state media reported.
Hong Kong's RTHK broadcaster cited experts as saying Mangkhut was expected to be the strongest typhoon to hit the city in decades. The Hong Kong Observatory issued its strongest storm warning for 10 hours on Sunday, just slightly shorter than the record time of 11 hours set by Typhoon York in 1999, the South China Morning Post reported.
In Guangdong, the storm killed two people a few hours after making landfall on Sunday evening and was triggering storm surges as high as 3 meters (10 feet), state broadcaster CCTV said.
Fifteen people were injured in the nearby gambling enclave of Macau, which closed casinos for the first time. The Hong Kong Observatory warned people to stay away from the Victoria Harbour landmark, where storm surges battered the sandbag-reinforced waterfront.
In Hong Kong, a video posted online by residents showed the top corner of an old building break and fall off, while in another video, a tall building swayed as strong winds blew.
The storm shattered glass windows on commercial skyscrapers in the city, sending sheets of paper pouring out of the buildings, fluttering and spiraling as they headed for the debris-strewn ground, according to several videos posted on social media.
The storm also felled trees, tore bamboo scaffolding off buildings under construction and flooded some areas of Hong Kong with waist-high waters, according to the South China Morning Post.
The paper said the heavy rains brought storm surges of 3 meters (10 feet) around Hong Kong.
The storm made landfall in the Guangdong city of Taishan at 5 p.m., packing wind speeds of 162 kilometers (100 miles) per hour. State television broadcaster CGTN reported that surging waves flooded a seaside hotel in the city of Shenzhen.
Groceries flew off the shelves of supermarkets in the provincial capital of Guangzhou as residents stocked up in anticipation of being confined at home by the typhoon, China's official Xinhua News Agency said.
Authorities in southern China issued a red alert, the most severe warning, as the national meteorological center said the densely populated region would face a "severe test caused by wind and rain" and urged officials to prepare for possible disasters.
Hundreds of flights were canceled. All high-speed and some normal rail services in Guangdong and Hainan provinces were also halted, the China Railway Guangzhou Group Co. said.
Hong Kong Security Minister John Lee Ka-chiu urged residents to prepare for the worst.
"Because Mangkhut will bring winds and rains of extraordinary speeds, scope and severity, our preparation and response efforts will be greater than in the past," Lee said. "Each department must have a sense of crisis, make a comprehensive assessment and plan, and prepare for the worst."
Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific said all of its flights would be canceled between 2:30 a.m. Sunday and 4 a.m. Monday. The city of Shenzhen also canceled all flights between Sunday and early Monday morning. Hainan Airlines canceled 234 flights in the cities of Haikou, Sanya, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai scheduled over the weekend.
In Macau, next door to Hong Kong, casinos were ordered to close from 11 p.m. Saturday, the first time such action was taken in the city, the South China Morning Post reported. Macau suffered catastrophic flooding during Typhoon Hato last year, leading to accusations of corruption and incompetence at its meteorological office.
In Macau's inner harbor district, the water level reached 1.5 meters (5 feet) on Sunday and was expected to rise further. The district was one of the most affected by floods from Typhoon Hato, which left 10 people dead.
In the northern Philippines, Mangkhut made landfall Saturday on the northeastern tip of Luzon island with sustained winds of 205 kilometers (127 miles) per hour and gusts of 255 kph (158 mph).
Dozens of people, mostly small-scale miners and their families, were feared to have been trapped by a landslide in the far-flung village of Ucab in Itogon town in the northern mountain province of Benguet, Itogon Mayor Victorio Palangdan told The Associated Press by phone.
Palangdan said three villagers who nearly got buried by the huge pile of mud and rocks told authorities they saw residents rush into an old three-story building, a former mining bunkhouse that has been transformed into a chapel, at the height of the typhoon's onslaught Saturday afternoon.
"That was not an authorized evacuation center," Palangdan said, but expressed sadness that the villagers, many of them poor miners, had few options to survive in a region where big corporations have profited immensely from gold mines.
"They were laughing off the police and disaster-response personnel who were warning them. They thought they were really safe there," he said.
Police Superintendent Pelita Tacio said 34 villagers had died and 36 remained missing in the landslides in Ucab and another village in Itogon town. Rescuers were scrambling to pull out the body of a victim from the mound of mud and rocks in Ucab before Tacio left the area Sunday.
"It's very sad. I could hear villagers wailing in their homes near the site of the accident," Tacio said by phone.
Rescuers were hampered by rain and mud, and the search and rescue operation was suspended at nightfall and will resume at daybreak Monday, Palangdan said. Police and their vehicles could not immediately reach the landslide-hit area because the ground was unstable and soaked from the heavy rains, regional police chief Rolando Nana told the ABS-CBN TV network.
Overall, at least 64 people have died in typhoon incidents in the northern Philippines, mostly from landslides and collapsed houses, according to the national police. Forty-five other people were missing and 33 were injured in the storm.
The hardest-hit area was Benguet, where 38 people died, mostly in the two landslides in Itogon, and 37 are missing, the police said.
Other deaths wrought by the storm elsewhere included a couple and their children who refused to evacuate from their house, which later got buried by a landslide in Nueva Vizcaya province. Four people died in northeastern Cagayan province, where the typhoon made landfall.
Still, the Philippines appeared to have been spared the high number of casualties many had feared. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan left more than 7,300 people dead or missing, flattened villages and displaced more than 5 million in the central Philippines. A massive evacuation ahead of Mangkhut helped lessen potential casualties, with about 87,000 people evacuating from high-risk areas, officials said.
The typhoon struck at the start of the rice and corn harvesting season in the Philippines' northern breadbasket, prompting farmers to scramble to save what they could of their crops, Cagayan Gov. Manuel Mamba said.(nbcnews.com)
The Syrian state news agency, SANA, reported late Saturday night that Israel had targeted the airport with missiles, activating air defenses, which shot down a number of the projectiles.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the attack targeted an arms depot near the airport where new weapons recently arrived for the Iranians or their Lebanese proxy, the Hezbollah terror group.
On Sunday, the monitoring group said that the alleged Israeli strike caused “substantial” damage at the airport, but had no immediate information on casualties.
Observer IL - @Obs_ILAccording to multiple reports the alleged #Israeli airstrike destroyed an #IRGC 747 cargo plane, as well as warehouses inside #Syria #Damascus Airport. There are pictures circulating of these warehouses with the roofs marked "UN" and "DHL" which veracity is yet to be proved.11:00 PM - Sep 15, 20185250 people are talking about this
According to multiple reports the alleged #Israeli airstrike destroyed an #IRGC 747 cargo plane, as well as warehouses inside #Syria #Damascus Airport. There are pictures circulating of these warehouses with the roofs marked "UN" and "DHL" which veracity is yet to be proved.
Israel rarely acknowledges attacks inside Syria, but has said it is its policy to employ military action to prevent weapons transfers to its enemies.
The IDF earlier this month acknowledged that it had conducted airstrikes against over 200 Iranian and Hezbollah targets in Syria since 2017, shedding light on its largely quiet activities across the border to prevent Tehran from establishing a permanent military presence in the war-torn country.
For years, Israel has been concerned that Iran is using opportunities presented by the Syrian civil war to entrench itself militarily in the country in order to further threaten the Jewish state — alongside the threat already posed by Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Al Arabiya English✔@AlArabiya_EngImages reportedly show #Syria's air defense batteries responding to what the Syrian state media said were #Israeli missiles targeting #Damascus international airporthttps://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2018/09/15/Syria-thwarts-Israeli-aggression-near-Damascus-airport.html …4:28 PM - Sep 15, 2018915 people are talking about this
Images reportedly show #Syria's air defense batteries responding to what the Syrian state media said were #Israeli missiles targeting #Damascus international airporthttps://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2018/09/15/Syria-thwarts-Israeli-aggression-near-Damascus-airport.html …
The 202 targets hit in Israeli airstrikes since 2017 were mostly shipments of advanced weaponry, as well as military bases and infrastructure, which the IDF officials said drove Iranian forces to abandon some posts.
In addition, Jerusalem has tried to get the Islamic Republic out of Syria through diplomatic means by appealing to the two main power-brokers in the region: Russia and the United States.
While Russia does not seem to have accepted Israel’s demand for Iran to be completely removed from Syria, it has agreed to force the Islamic Republic’s forces and proxies to leave the areas closest to the border with Israel.
(timesofisrael.com)