Aerial view of a landslide caused by tropical storm Megi, which hit the village of Kantagnos in Baybay town, Leyte province, Philippines, on 13 April 2022. Photo: Bobbie Alota / AFP / Getty Images
Aerial view of a landslide caused by tropical storm Megi, which hit the village of Kantagnos in Baybay town, Leyte province, Philippines, on 13 April 2022. Photo: Bobbie Alota / AFP / Getty Images

By Akanksha Sharma
14 April 2022

(CNN) – The death toll in the Philippines from tropical storm Megi has risen to 76 while hundreds of thousands of others remain displaced, authorities in the country said Wednesday.

Many of the deaths came in landslides and floods caused when the storm made landfall on Sunday, battering the eastern and southern coasts of the Philippines with sustained winds of up to 65 kilometers (40 miles) per hour and gusts of up to 80 kph (49 mph).

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said at least 29 people remain missing and eight others are injured.

The Philippines is still reeling, a week after Tropical Storm Megi hit the island region and brought with it flooding, landslides and high winds. Authorities report nearly 2 million people have been affected. At least 167 people were killed and 110 are still missing. Although the weather has now calmed, officials are warning serious threats remain. Sarah Balter has more. Video: TRT

More than 920,000 people have been affected by the storm, over 200,000 people displaced, while more than 35,000 were pre-emptively evacuated, the council said. Some 660 evacuation centers are in operation, it added.

The agricultural damage caused by Megi, known as Agaton in the Philippines, is estimated at more than $8 million (423.8 million Philippine pesos) as of Wednesday — twice the amount reported a day earlier, the Department of Agriculture said.

A school is submerged by floodwaters in Leyte province, southern Philippines, on 11 April 2022, following heavy rains brought by tropical storm Megi. Photo: Bobbie Alota / AFP / Getty Images
A school is submerged by floodwaters in Leyte province, southern Philippines, on 11 April 2022, following heavy rains brought by tropical storm Megi. Photo: Bobbie Alota / AFP / Getty Images

At least 6,557 farmers and 10,920 hectares of farmland have been affected with commodities including rice, corn and livestock hit by the tropical storm, the department added.

Among the worst affected regions are Western Visayas, Eastern Visayas and Caraga.

In the eastern province of Leyte, the bodies of 22 people were recovered after being buried under a landslide, Joemen Collado, police chief of Baybay city, told reporters earlier this week. “There were landslides in communities and then some of the victims were swept by floods,” Collado said.

The mayor of Abuyog, in Leyte province, said on Facebook that a landslide had “wiped out” Pilar, a local barangay or neighborhood, in a “catastrophe that broke my heart”. [more]

Storm Megi death toll rises as hundreds of thousands displaced in Philippines