Inquirer News

Typhoon gone but Telco services in some Albay towns still down

Residents sit inside a classroom at the Central Elementary School which was turned into an evacuation centre in Santo Domingo, Albay province on December 25, 2016 due to approaching Typhoon Nock-Ten. Thousands of residents were fleeing coastal and other hazardous areas in the eastern Philippines on December 25 as a powerful typhoon barrelled towards the disaster-prone archipelago. AFP PHOTO

LEGAZPI CITY—While the weather in Albay has dramatically improved, parts of its first and third districts remained unreachable by Monday afternoon after Typhoon “Nina” (international name: Nock-Ten) left the region.

Telecommunication services in Guinobatan, Tabaco City and Tiwi were still down, leaving Bicolanos in other parts of the country and abroad unable to contact their relatives.

“We don’t know why our communications here are down. Our towers were not damaged by Typhoon Nina,” Guinobatan Mayor Ann Gemma Ongjoco told the Inquirer.

As of 10 a.m., all evacuees in two evacuation centers have decamped. The Municipal Disaster Risk Reduction Management Office (MDRRMO) of Guinobatan has recorded 6,316 families displaced by the typhoon.

READ: Albay orders full decampment of 165,000 storm evacuees

The MDRRRMO, however, has yet to determine the final number of families and individuals affected by the typhoon as other villages could not report because of failed communication services.

Some parts of Guinobatan remained non-passable, preventing the local government from delivering assistance to residents.

Ongjoco said that in their initial assessment, Nina’s damage to rice was worth P10 million while damage to infrastructures may reach P25 million. RAM/rga

READ: More than 300,000 displaced by Typhoon Nina—NDRRMC

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