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  • 16
    May
    2013
    5:58am, EDT

    One million flee as Cyclone Mahasen batters Bangladesh coast

    Cyclone Mahasen slammed into Bangladesh's low-lying coast as evacuees huddled in shelters from a storm the United Nations says threatens 4.1 million people. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Farid Hossain, The Associated Press

    COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh -- Cyclone Mahasen struck the southern coast of Bangladesh on Thursday, lashing remote fishing villages with heavy rain and fierce winds that flattened mud and straw huts and forced the evacuation of more than 1 million people.

    The main section of the storm reached land Thursday and immediately began weakening, according to Mohammad Shah Alam, director of the Bangladesh Meteorological Department. However, its forward movement was also slowing, meaning that towns in its path would have to weather the storm for longer, he said.

    Even before the brunt of the storm hit, at least 18 deaths related to Mahasen were reported in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

    The U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs had said Wednesday that depending on its trajectory, the storm could bring life-threatening conditions to about 8.2 million people in Bangladesh, Myanmar and northeast India. But the storm appeared to spare at least some areas once thought to be at risk.

    In the seafront resort town of Cox's Bazar, tens of thousands of people had fled shanty homes along the coast and packed into cyclone shelters, hotels, schools and government office buildings. But by Thursday afternoon, the sun was shining and local government administrator Ruhul Amin said he planned to close the shelters by that evening.

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Bangladeshi pedestrians gather to watch the sea at a beach while Cyclone Mahasen heads toward landfall in Chittagong on Thursday.

    "Thank God we have been spared this time," Amin said.

    Mahasen hit land with maximum wind speeds of about 62 mph and quickly weakened to 56 mph, said Alam, the meteorological official.

    Along Myanmar's western coast, danger was particularly high for tens of thousands of displaced Rohingya people living in plastic-roofed tents and huts made of reeds in dozens of refugee camps.

    Gemunu Amarasinghe / AP

    An internally displaced Rohingya man pushes a rickshaw with children and belongings leaving a camp for displaced Rohingya people in Sittwe, northwestern Rakhine State, in Myanmar on Thursday. Members of the displaced minority started moving to safer shelters ahead of the arrival of Cyclone Mahasen.

    Driven from their homes by violence, some members of the Muslim minority group refused to follow evacuation orders. Many distrust officials in the majority-Buddhist country, where Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination.

    U.N. officials, hoping they would inspire greater trust, fanned out across the area to encourage people to leave. They said Thursday that more than 35,000 people had been relocated.

    In Bangladesh, river ferries and boat service were suspended, and scores of factories near the choppy Bay of Bengal were closed. The military said it was keeping 22 navy ships and 19 Air Force helicopters at the ready.

    "We have seen such a disaster before," said Mohammad Abu Taleb, who shut down his convenience shop in Cox's Bazar, a city of 200,000. "It's better to stay home. I'm not taking any chance."

    A 1991 cyclone that slammed into Bangladesh from the Bay of Bengal killed an estimated 139,000 people and left millions homeless. In 2008, Myanmar's southern delta was devastated Cyclone Nargis, which swept away entire farming villages and killed more than 130,000 people. Both those cyclones were much more powerful than Cyclone Mahasen, which is rated Category 1 — the weakest level.

    Heavy rain and storm surge could prove deadlier than the wind. Bangladesh's meteorological office said the cyclone was moving so slowly it may take a whole day for it to pass the Bangladesh coast.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    48 comments

    "Many distrust officials in the majority-Buddhist country, where Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination." Many Muslims appear to have some mental problems. Some Muslims always feel they are discriminated and so they want special treatments; afterwards they want Sharia Laws for them first and  …

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  • 22
    Jan
    2013
    9:44am, EST

    Half world's iron ore trade halted by storm in Australia's 'cyclone alley'

    Daniel Munoz / Reuters, file

    A train loaded with iron ore travels toward the Rio Tinto Parker Point iron ore facility as an empty train leaves, in Dampier in the Pilbara region of western Australia, in this file picture taken April 20, 2011.

    By James Regan, Reuters

    SYDNEY -- A tropical storm intensifying off Australia's northwest coast brought nearly half the world's iron ore trade to a halt Tuesday, closing huge ports used by mining firms Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.

    Port Hedland, Dampier and Cape Lambert ports were in the process of closing on Tuesday as the tropical storm gathered strength in the Indian Ocean, sending dozens of vessels in search of safe harbors.

    Iron ore prices have gained support from concerns that Australia's cyclone season, which runs from November until April, will reduce supplies.

    Most of the iron ore mined in Australia is contracted by Chinese steel mills, with Japanese and South Korean mills also big buyers.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The region between Port Hedland and Dampier is known among mariners as "cyclone alley," with at least half a dozen cyclones hitting from November to April each season.

    The current storm is forecast to intensify to a Category 1 cyclone -- the weakest on a scale of one to five -- early on Wednesday.

    Gales of up to 60 mph could develop between Pardoo and Dampier, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology said.

    Oil and gas producers in the area were also bracing for the storm. Apache Energy said it had suspended operations at the Stag and Van Gogh oil fields due to the cyclone threat.

    A separate tropical storm in Australia's remote northeast briefly reached cyclone strength and forced China's MMG Ltd to temporarily halt shipments of zinc concentrate from its Century mine, the second-largest zinc mine in the world.

    The storm crossed the Queensland state coast with heavy rain and wind gusts of up to 60 mph. It is forecast to move further inland before tracking south on Wednesday. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    Comment

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  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    10:23am, EST

    Rare snowstorm blankets Holy Land, brings brief joy to war-weary Damascus

    Darren Whiteside / Reuters

    Snow covers the Dome of the Rock on the compound know to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif and to Jews as Temple Mount in Jerusalem's Old City on Jan. 10, 2013.

    Abir Sultan / EPA

    An Ultra Orthodox Jew wades through the snow next to the Old City walls in Jerusalem on Jan. 10, 2013. The region has been gripped by a cold wave accompanied by heavy snowfalls over the last few days.

    Youssef Badawi / EPA

    Children with their families play in the snow on the outskirts of Damascus, Syria, on Jan. 10, 2013, after the region was hit by heavy snowfalls overnight. Syria has been gripped by a cold wave accompanied by heavy snowfalls for the second day, cutting off roads and bringing life to a standstill. The government has postponed the mid-year exams because of the blizzard that has blanketed all streets and hilltops.

    The worst snowstorm in 20 years shut public transport, roads and schools in Jerusalem and along the northern Israeli region bordering on Lebanon on Thursday. 

    Jerusalem was transformed into a winter wonderland after heavy overnight snowfall turned the Holy City and much of the region white, bringing hordes of excited children onto the streets.

    Powerful winter storm brings snow, havoc to Mideast, leaving 8 dead

    In neighboring Syria, the snowfall that covered Damascus in white on Wednesday sparked an overnight outbreak of playfulness among Syrians, who momentarily ignored their bloody civil war and forgot their affiliations as dissidents, loyalists and even soldiers.

    "Last night, for the first time in months, I heard laughter instead of shelling. Even the security forces put down their guns and helped us make a snowman," Iman, a resident of the central Shaalan neighborhood, said by Skype on Thursday. 

    -- Reuters, Agence France-Presse

     

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Snow falls as an ultra-orthodox Jewish man prays at the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Jan. 10, 2013. Stormy weather conditions continued on Thursday with snow, torrential rains and strong winds across the region.

    Majdi Mohammed / AP

    Palestinians play in the snow next to a section of Israel's separation barrier in Qalandia, between Jerusalem and the West bank city of Ramallah, on Jan. 10, 2013.

    Ahmad Gharabli / AFP - Getty Images

    A man takes pictures of the snow-covered Dome of the Rock at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in the old city of Jerusalem on Jan. 10, 2013.

    Avi Ohayon / Israeli Government Press Office via Getty Images

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu enjoys the snow with his family on Jan. 10, 2013 in Jerusalem.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    A man walks through tombs covered by snow on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem on Jan. 10, 2013.

    Jim Hollander / EPA

    Palestinian girls play in the snow on the Mount of Olives in East Jerusalem on Jan. 10, 2013.

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Slideshow: Winter's frozen splendor

    AFP - Getty Images

    Ice and snow changes our environment, as winter engulfs our world.

    Launch slideshow

    14 comments

    A message from a higher authority? Time to chill out for a while?

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    Explore related topics: weather, israel, middle-east, winter, storm, snow, syria, world-news, jerusalem, damascus
  • 9
    Jan
    2013
    5:04pm, EST

    Powerful winter storm brings snow, havoc to Mideast, leaving 8 dead

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    The city of Istanbul is covered with snow on Jan. 9, after a storm blanketed Turkey's commercial hub, a city of 15 million, paralyzing daily life, disrupting air traffic and land transport.

    Ammar Awad / Reuters

    Palestinians play with snow during a snow storm in the West Bank village of Halhul near Hebron on Jan. 9. At least 8 people have died due to a winter storm in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian territories. Meteorological agencies in Israel and Lebanon both called it the worst storm in 20 years.

    Reuters

    A man walks on snow after a heavy snowstorm in the desert near Tabuk, 932 miles from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Jan. 9.

    By Barbara Surk, Jamal Halaby, The Associated Press -- The fiercest winter storm to hit the Mideast in years brought a rare foot of snow to Jordan on Wednesday, caused fatal accidents in Lebanon and the West Bank, and disrupted traffic on the Suez Canal in Egypt. At least eight people died across the region.

    In Lebanon, the Red Cross said storm-related accidents killed six people over the past two days. Several drowned after slipping into rivers from flooded roads, one person froze to death and another died after his car went off a slippery road, according to George Kettaneh, Operations Director for the Lebanese Red Cross.

    The unusual weather over the past few days hit vulnerable Syrian refugees living in tent camps very hard, particularly some 50,000 sheltering in the Zaatari camp in Jordan's northern desert. Torrential rains over four days have flooded some 200 tents and forced women and infants to evacuate in temperatures that dipped below freezing at night, whipping wind and lashing rain.

    "It's been freezing cold and constant rain for the past four days," lamented Ahmad Tobara, 44, who evacuated his tent when its shafts submerged in flood water in Zaatari. A camp spokesman said that by Wednesday, some 1,500 refugees had been displaced within the camp and were now living in mobile homes normally used for schools.

    Read the full story.

    AFP - Getty Images

    A visitor climbs the steps of Baalbek's Bachus temple as snow covers the Roman ruins of the historic town in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley on Jan. 9, following a fierce storm which has whipped the region this week with temperatures dropping dramatically and snow falling on across Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Israel.

    Said Khatib / AFP - Getty Images

    A Palestinian man uses his donkey cart to transport people across a flooded street in the Rafah refugee camp, in the southern Gaza Strip, on Jan. 9.

    Afif Diab / Reuters

    Syrian refugees play with snow outside their tents during a winter storm in al-Marj, in the Bekaa valley on Jan. 9. The worst winter storm in two decades has hit the eastern Mediterranean this week, bringing destruction and death to Syria and its neighbors who are already dealing with a refugee crisis from the country's civil war.

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    A seagull stands on Galata Tower on Jan. 9. Heavy snowfall blanketed Turkey's commercial hub Istanbul, a city of 15 millions, paralyzing daily life, disrupting air traffic and land transport.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    3 comments

    What knucklehead is shortening "Middle East" (Ie Israel; Iran; Jordan) to MidEast (which would be Ohio; Pennsylvania; and Kentucky)? Stop bastardizing my mother tongue!

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    Explore related topics: weather, mideast, winter, storm, snow, world-news
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    12:56pm, EST

    'I can only rely on myself': Insurance is expensive, unfamiliar to disaster-hit Chinese

    In the U.S., Americans rely on insurance to protect against disasters. In China, families rely on themselves. CNBC Asia's Eunice Yoon has more from Beijing.

    By Adrienne Mong, NBC News

    Imagine a day-long storm with torrential rains and high winds pounding your home. By the time it blows over, you have lost everything you own. And you have no insurance.

    This was the scenario in July for residents of Fangshan, a district 50 miles from the center of China's capital Beijing. 

    Some 18 inches of rainfall dumped on Fangshan, causing a normally dry river to overflow and flood the surrounding homes. Half of the 77 people killed as a result of the storm were in Fangshan – as were half of the estimated 57,000 people forced to evacuate their homes.

    Liu Su Xia, a spirited 60-year-old grandmother, was in her house when the water rushed into the single-story courtyard building. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I was terrified," she said. "The water was this red color and went everywhere." 

    She grabbed a ladder and clambered up to the second floor window of her neighbor's house to watch. As soon as the water receded, she climbed back down and began cleaning what she could. 

    When her 63-year-old husband Xin Zhong Qi returned from the city center, where he was working on a construction site, they toiled together all night and into the next day to salvage what they could.

    "There was nothing worth saving," Xin said. "We had to throw everything away."

    As for compensation, "the government still hasn't come forward with a plan," Xin said.

    'I can only rely on myself'
    The flooding in Fangshan highlighted the Chinese state's weaknesses and faults – and also underscored how much ordinary Chinese still have to rely on themselves. In the United States, families rely on homeowners' insurance to protect them against damage from disasters such as Superstorm Sandy, which hit the Northeast in November. But in China, many ordinary people remain unaware of and often unable to buy insurance. 

    Read more China coverage on NBC's Behind The Wall

    Damage from the flooding across Beijing cost $1.6 billion, according to municipal officials. Authorities have supplied temporary housing in Fangshan and announced plans to help create new permanent housing on safer ground.

    But there was plenty of popular outrage over the authorities' handling of the disaster, especially the official casualty count, which many believed to be too low. Then there was criticism over the existing emergency response system, deemed too slow and inefficient. Finally, the destruction of so many homes raised concerns that existing buildings in Fangshan were built on unsafe grounds.

    After Hong Kong weathers typhoon, anger roils over Beijing flooding deaths

    Xin and Liu have not availed themselves of the temporary housing; it wasn't clear whether they were eligible or whether they did not seek out the option.

    Miguel Toran / CNBC Asia

    Friends help Xin Zhong Qi repair his home after it was damaged by flooding.

    "I can only rely on myself," said Xin. "At least 90 percent of the time, you have to rely on yourself."

    When asked whether they had ever heard of homeowners' insurance, Liu cackled.

    "Aiya! We’re peasants! Who has that kind of money?"

    Xin also admitted he doesn't quite understand what it is. 

    An opportunity?
    He's probably not the only one. The concept of homeowners' insurance is still new in China. It was barely two decades ago that private home ownership was re-introduced across cities, when the Communist Party gave millions of state workers the opportunity to buy their government-supplied homes at bargain basement rates.

    "With around 250 million households entering the middle class in China over the next five or 10 years, that's a great opportunity for insurance products to reach even deeper in the Chinese population," said Joe Ngai, managing partner at McKinsey & Co.'s Hong Kong office.

    Hong Kong offers insight into storm prep

    In fact, McKinsey believes China will be the second largest insurance market in the world after the U.S. in 2020.

    "We would think about insurance if it was offered to us," said Yu Shuang, another Fangshan resident whose home was badly damaged by the flood. Yu and her husband used their savings to repair their house and to replace their furniture and car. "But we're not sure whether we would want to look at what the government might offer or buy our own."

    Xin, however, remained skeptical.

    "We're old. We don't have that many years left. Why bother [buying insurance]? And we don't have any money," he said. "Anyway, this was a once in a lifetime event. One big flood in 60 years."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Video: Street fighting, shelling in Syria capital
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    14 comments

    It's China, a second-world country at best. We have so many shady insurance companies here, imagine what's going to pop up in China. No wonder they are suspicious.

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    Explore related topics: weather, china, insurance, storm, beijing, natural-disaster, featured, adrienne-mong
  • 6
    Dec
    2012
    6:43am, EST

    Man found alive 2 days after being swept away by Philippines typhoon

    Reuters

    Typhoon survivor Carlos Agang lies on a stretcher after he was found alive Thursday.

    By Reuters

    Updated at 2 p.m. ET: NEW BATAAN, Philippines – Rescue workers found a 54-year-old man clinging to a boulder by a river – injured but alive – two days after a powerful typhoon ravaged the south of the Philippines.

    At least 420 people were killed and nearly 400 are missing, The Associated Press reported Thursday, citing Philippines authorities.

    All Carlos Agang had to eat was coconut and water until he was found in a tattered shirt with a fractured leg and bruises by a group of rescue volunteers in New Bataan town in Compostela Valley, the province worst hit by Typhoon Botha. Reuters initially reported he was 77, but later corrected his age.

    "I can't believe it. I didn't expect to see people survive two days after they were swept by flood and mud," fire volunteer Mark Roman Jumilla told Reuters.


    "For two days, he survived on coconut and water. He lost his family when floodwaters swept a temporary shelter area where he and his family sought refuge," Jumilla said.

    Rescuers also found a pregnant woman on the other side of the river with her one-year son after escaping floods that swamped their house after Typhoon Bopha hit land on Tuesday.

    "It happened so fast. Water came rushing to us while we were leaving our house to move to safer grounds," Lenlen Medrano, 23, told Reuters as she was being carried by soldiers in a stretcher.

    "I prayed hard over and over until we found ourselves on the riverbank," she added.

    A Reuters photographer saw four bodies near the spot where Agang was rescued. The river's current was strong, making it hard for rescue teams to reach other survivors.

    'Entire families were washed away' as Typhoon Bopha hits

    The death toll could rise further, with local government officials reporting hundreds missing.

    An intense, powerful typhoon has cut across the Philippines triggering landslides and flash floods on the island of Mindanao. ITN's Jane Deith reports. Warning: The story contains some disturbing images.

    PhotoBlog: Grief amid Bopha's destruction

    About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, often causing death and destruction. Almost exactly a year ago, Typhoon Washi killed 1,500 people in Mindanao.

    Arturo "Arthur" Uy, governor of Compostela Valley, said search and rescue operations were continuing, particularly in far-flung areas in New Bataan town, where a three-year old child was plucked from under a crumpled house on Wednesday, more than 24 hours after the typhoon made landfall. The child's mother and a sibling are missing.

    Erik De Castro / Reuters

    Rescuers on Thursday evacuate a pregnant woman with her child who survived flooding in New Bataan, Philippines.

    "I believe we can rescue more people," Uy told Reuters. "We evacuated people from riverbanks and shorelines. But the floods and strong winds battered not just the riverbanks but also places where residents were supposed to be safe."


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A few residents in Compostela Valley started repairing their houses, but for majority, rebuilding will not be easy.

    "I don't know what to do now," coconut farmer Roger Calarian told Reuters while queuing for a rice ration at the center of New Bataan town. "I lost my house, I lost my livelihood. I want to rebuild my hut but I don't think I have the energy to do that now."

    Calarian said he and his wife were lucky to have survived when coconut trees crashed on their house on Tuesday. "We prayed, hugged each other until the winds calmed down, and then we crawled out to safety," he added. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • EXCLUSIVE: US behind Afghan 'insecurity,' Karzai says
    • Sex mobs target Egypt's women
    • Researchers: North America least likely region for terrorism
    • Africa's lion population plummets, study finds
    • North Korea pays tribute to Kim Jong Il's 'threadbare' parka
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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    11 comments

    I went through a typhoon, 8.1 earthquake and the Mt. Pinatubo eruption. I thought the whole island was going down in a giant whirlpool. It amazes me of the tenacity of the philappinos. They always bounce back. You haven't seen poor until youve been to the Philippines.

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    Explore related topics: rescue, philippines, typhoon, storm, survivors, featured, bopha, new-bataan
  • 4
    Dec
    2012
    8:55am, EST

    Dozens killed as 160-mph typhoon hits Philippines

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    The strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines this year pounded the southern island of Mindanao on Tuesday, killing dozens as it destroyed homes and brought down power and communication lines.

    At least 81 people died in Mindanao, ABS-CBNnews.com cited officials as saying.

    Typhoon Bopha made landfall at dawn, uprooting trees and tearing off roofs. The Weather Channel said the storm was packing maximum sustained winds of 160 mph and was the equivalent of a category five hurricane.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    At least 43 people were killed in flash floods and landslides near a mining area on Mindanao, ABS-CBN reported, saying waters and mudslides had swept through an army post.

    A television reporter said she saw numerous bodies lined up near the army base. 


    Disaster official Liza Mazo, said more casualties were expected to be discovered as search and rescue teams fanned out.

    PhotoBlog: Images of Bopha's damage
    PhotoBlog: Bopha stirs awe from space

    Media said dozens of people were injured by flying debris, falling trees and swept away by swollen rivers and flash floods.

    More than 155,000 people were in shelters late on Tuesday, due in part to an early evacuation.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Residents brave heavy wind and rains during Typhoon Bopha on the southern island of Mindanao on Tuesday.

    About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, often causing death and destruction. Typhoon Washi killed 1,500 people on Mindanao in 2011.

    "We have suffered enough," Felicitas Cabusao said, clutching a Holy Rosary beside her crying 12-year-old daughter.

    Cabusao said her daughter survived Typhoon Washi, almost exactly a year ago, after she was washed out to sea when flash floods swept away entire coastal villages.

    Dozens of domestic flights and ferry services in the central and southern Philippines were suspended on Tuesday. Schools and some businesses were closed.

    Bopha was moving west-northwest and was expected to move out into the South China Sea by Thursday. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    • Cops hurt as British unionist protesters try to storm Belfast City Hall in flag spat
    • Supporters of Islamist president push Egypt to tipping point
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    • ANALYSIS: Egyptians warn Morsi is no friend of US
    • Bread and expired milk: School lunch scandal sparks outrage in China
    • PhotoBlog: Building South Sudan from scratch
    • ANALYSIS: UN Palestinian vote a personal victory for Abbas
    • Fast cars go cheap as bubble bursts in 'China's Dubai'
    • Experts: Antarctica, Greenland ice melting into sea

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    15 comments

    Dear Friends: There are more storms heading into the Asian areas.

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    Explore related topics: philippines, typhoon, storm, floods, featured, mindanao, bopha
  • 4
    Dec
    2012
    12:05am, EST

    Super Typhoon Bopha slams into Philippines

    AFP - Getty Images

    Workers clear a road with a fallen tree after Typhoon Bopha hit the city of Tagum, Davao del Norter province, on the southern island of Mindanao on Dec.4.

     

    By NBC News staff

    Super Typhoon Bopha, packing maximum sustained winds of 160 mph, made landfall in the southern Philippines early Tuesday, The Weather Channel reported.

    The storm is equivalent to a category-five hurricane, according to The Weather Channel report.

    The storm came ashore in the southern province of Davao at dawn, uprooting trees and blowing off roofs, Australian broadcaster ABC reported.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Residents in flood-prone areas were moving into shelters, ABC reported.

    On Monday, Philippine President Benigno Aquino warned the public to take storm warnings seriously. "The potential destruction of this typhoon is no joke," Aquino said in a national television and radio address.

    Photoblog: Typhoon Bopha stirs awe from space

    Disaster authorities suspended ferries, banned small fishermen from going to sea, closed schools and suspended small-scale mining operations.

    Emergency shelters were set up and soldiers, police and emergency workers were evacuating entire coastal areas in some regions.

    About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, often causing death and destruction.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    • North Korea pays tribute to Kim Jong Il's 'threadbare' parka
    • ANALYSIS: Egyptians warn Morsi is no friend of US
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    • ANALYSIS: UN Palestinian vote a personal victory for Abbas
    • Fast cars go cheap as bubble bursts in 'China's Dubai'
    • Experts: Antarctica, Greenland ice melting into sea

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    4 comments

    Now they'll want us to text #### to donate ten dollars for relief. Where the hell is the US relief from all of the countries we help.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, philippines, typhoon, storm
  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    7:54pm, EDT

    Aid workers prep Haiti's tent city residents for Isaac's onlsaught

    Those considered most vulnerable were urged to move into an evacuation camp housed in a school building, but others with nowhere else to go were digging trenches to avoid the water. Haiti's population remains especially vulnerable due to the country's sprawling shanty towns. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By Erika Angulo, NBC News

    PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti – As the winds picked up strength in Haiti, concern grew Friday among dozens of aid workers trying to prepare more than 400,000 tent city residents to face Tropical Storm Isaac.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Gallons of water and emergency kits were loaded swiftly into trucks at the American Red Cross headquarters in Port au Prince.

    The head of the organization in Haiti, Sandrine Capelle Manuel, said her main concern is flooding and mudslides.


    Handout / Reuters

    Members of the International Organization for Migration register displaced people who will take shelter at a school before the arrival of Tropical Storm Isaac in Port au Prince, Haiti, on Friday.

    “Over 80 percent of the people are living under the poverty line, and a lot of people are living on no-built areas on the bottom of a ravine,” she said.

    Just a few miles east, at a camp in the suburb of Pétion-Ville, hundreds of earthquake survivors received leaflets with drawings showing how to better secure their tents during the storm. They have been homeless since January 12, 2010, when an earthquake crumbled their homes and took more than 200,000 lives.

    Chiara Lucchini Gilera, is the Camp and Relocations Program Manager for J/P HRO, the relief organization trying to help those evacuees survive Isaac.

    Isaac to hit Haiti overnight; tropical storm watch for southern Florida

    Live updates and analysis from weather.com
    Transcript of weather.com experts answering Isaac questions 

    Follow Isaac's path with our storm tracker

     

    “I expect to find people without places, with lots of things washed away,” Gilera said.

    Workers for the non-profit organization founded by American actor Sean Penn plan to shelter the most vulnerable -- the handicapped, pregnant women and the elderly -- at the camp school, but the rest will have to be turned away because there is not enough room.

    The American Red Cross estimated there are at least 557 tent cities remaining in Haiti since the earthquake and no place for most of the people in those camps to seek shelter.

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    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Crushing political dissent'? Gambia to execute every prisoner on death row
    • Much at stake for US as tensions rise in China Seas
    • Chinese hail trash picker who saved 30 babies
    • Tropical Storm Isaac threatens Haiti, Dominican Republic
    • Israeli protesters warn against war as government appears to prep Iran strikes
    • Still hobbled by quake, Haiti awaits Isaac
    • German state raids buildings in crackdown on neo-Nazi groups

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    7 comments

    Someone needs to just take the money donated to them after the earthquake and buy a small island and relocate them. Tell them, "Here's your second chance. You are on your own, sink or swim, you will have no one to blame but yourselves. Fresh natural resources, we'll give you a hand with building hom …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: haiti, weather, storm, isaac
  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    5:56am, EDT

    Isaac takes aim at Haiti; tropical storm watch on for southern Florida

    Those considered most vulnerable were urged to move into an evacuation camp housed in a school building, but others with nowhere else to go were digging trenches to avoid the water. Haiti's population remains especially vulnerable due to the country's sprawling shanty towns. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By NBC News and wire reports

    Updated at 11 p.m. ET: Tropical Storm Isaac strengthened on Friday as its lashing rains took aim at flood-prone Haiti, but it was not expected to become a hurricane until it barreled into the Gulf of Mexico early next week. 

    On its current path, forecasters said Isaac would hit Cuba and the southern tip of Florida before making landfall anywhere from the Florida Panhandle in the northwestern part of the state to Alabama and as far west as New Orleans.

    Forecasters put the entire coast of south Florida under tropical storm watch as of 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) on Friday.

    But the biggest immediate concern was heavily deforested Haiti, where the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said the full force of the storm was expected to be felt later Friday.  

    Isaac could pass near Florida's Gulf Coast early Monday just as the Republican National Convention is scheduled to start in Tampa. 

    Winds at tropical storm strength extend 185 miles out from Isaac's center, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said in an afternoon advisory, making it a very wide storm.

    On exiting Haiti, Isaac's center should cross Cuba on Saturday, and then pass south of the Florida Keys before making landfall as a Category 1 hurricane overnight Tuesday somewhere between New Orleans and Tallahassee, NBC meteorologist Al Roker said Friday on TODAY. Warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico will be "energy for the storm" as it makes its way across the gulf, he added.


    In related developments Friday:

    • The U.S. embassy in Haiti sent an e-mail to American citizens in the country warning that flights into and out of Port-au-Prince have been suspended due to Isaac.
    • Oil and gas producers in the Gulf of Mexico started preparing as Isaac's track looked to skirt the heart of the U.S. offshore energy producing zone. BP said it would shut down its giant Thunder Horse platform, the world's largest. Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron and Apache Corp. said they would evacuate some workers from their Gulf platforms with no production impacts. Other offshore drillers were likely to shut production in coming days as the storm approaches.
    • The U.S. military moved 22 F-16s from Homestead Air Reserve Base in Florida to Fort Worth, Texas. Three F-15s from the base are on alert to move to Jacksonville if necessary.

    How do you salvage vacation plans when a hurricane strikes? NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    South Florida could see a few twisters and heavy rain -- some 5-10 inches Sunday and into Monday, weather.com experts said in an online chat with readers Friday.

    Florida has not been hit by a major hurricane since 2005 and officials are concerned that residents there have become complacent.

    Aid workers prep Haiti's tent city residents for Isaac's onlsaught

    "I think it's a challenge of getting people to understand their risk and make sure they’ve got a plan," said Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

    With more than 19 million people living across the Sunshine State, Fugate wants every Florida resident to have enough supplies to last 72 hours and to know when to evacuate.

    Click this image to get to our Atlantic storm tracker.

    "I think the most dangerous thing is when people keep waiting to see what the next forecast is even if they’re in an evacuation zone. They say, 'Oh, it’s just a Category 1 storm or a minimum hurricane.' We’ve seen significant impacts from tropical storm force winds and rain," Fugate added.

    In the Florida Keys, where there are few routes available for evacuation -- U.S. 1, Key West International Airport, and the Florida Keys Marathon Airport -- Mayor Craig Cates said his biggest concern was the storm's timing. Cates said he would need at least 36 hours to begin evacuations of tourists and residents.

    "If it (Isaac) comes straight on to Key West, we’re worried about the damage that could happen in Key West. If it goes further up the Keys, it could damage power lines and we could get affected," Cates said. "Even if it hits further up the state, we have got to be prepared with our generators and our supplies. Being on an island, we understand that."

    Forecasters with The Weather Channel think the evacuation decisions could come quickly. It is anticipated that watches will be issued for South Florida and the Keys by Friday night. In the event of an evacuation, Cates told The Weather Channel that tourists would leave first, followed by special needs citizens. 

    Live updates and analysis from weather.com
    Transcript of weather.com experts answering Isaac questions 

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott said state officials are working with convention organizers, who will ultimately make the call on a delay or cancellation of the event.

    State officials announced Thursday that they will wait to make decisions about moving supplies until after Isaac passes Cuba. FEMA has already placed food and generators in Jacksonville.  

    Isaac is forecast to remain a tropical storm after crossing the Dominican Republic and Haiti and then passing over Cuba into the Florida Straits.

    Tampa officials have not ruled out the possibility of postponing the GOP Convention if the storm poses a public safety risk. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

    The National Hurricane Center warned it was "important not to focus on the exact track because of forecast uncertainties and the fact that Isaac has a large area of tropical storm force winds."

    Follow Isaac's path with our storm tracker

    Isaac was expected to dump between 8 and 12 inches of rain over parts of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, and up to 20 inches in a few areas. That poses a significant threat to Haiti, which is highly prone to flooding and mudslides because of its near-total deforestation.

    Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, still has about 350,000 people living in tents or makeshift shelters more than 2-1/2 years after a devastating earthquake that took more than a quarter of a million lives.

    With nearly 400,000 people still living in evacuation tents, a hurricane or even a tropical storm could lead to deaths and more damage to the already fragile country. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    Red Cross workers toured crowded tent camps of Haitians left homeless by the 2010 quake to warn about Isaac.

    Authorities in the Dominican Republic evacuated people living on the banks of rivers, streams and areas vulnerable to landslides in preparation for the approach of Isaac, whose effects were beginning to be felt with showers in the south of the country.

    Weather.com and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    246 comments

    There are so many things I can say about The Republicans..but The Higher Power does it so much better!!!! However, my prayers goes out to family and friends to be protected from the storm...

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    Explore related topics: haiti, weather, florida, storm, isaac, dominican-republic
  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    5:17am, EDT

    17 hospitalized after lightning hits Canada food festival

    By NBCNews.com staff

    More than a dozen people were hospitalized after lightning struck an outdoor food festival in Whitby, Ontario, on Sunday, according to Canadian news reports.

    Lightning struck a tent at the Whitby Ribfest, about 40 miles east of Toronto, just before 2 p.m. ET, leaving at least 17 people injured, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. reported.


    It quoted organizers as saying the weather changed rapidly, leaving many at the event to squeeze under a tent moment before the strike.

    One of those struck, Bill Sandiford, told the CBC: "The tent was absolutely packed full of people. It was so painful, yet the pain was gone so fast. The pain didn't linger.”

    Durham police Sgt. Al Valks told the Toronto Star seven people were rushed to the hospital while the other 10 made their own way there. All of them suffered burn wounds from the strike.

    "Apparently the electricity went through their feet up through their bodies. It was painful," he told the newspaper.

    Steve Peddle and his wife Rose were inside the dining tent when the strike happened.

    "You see the flash and it sounded like a bomb (went off) exactly at the same time," he told the Star. "It was so loud."

    Organizer Colin Regan said the event tents had lightning rods on top and had prepared for stormy weather.

    The Durham region had been under a severe thunderstorm warning Sunday.

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    32 comments

    "the event tents had lightning rods on top and had prepared for stormy weather." I would question the grounding of the lightning rods. Sounds like there was not enough contact in the earth. I bet the fact that so many were under the tent is what saved them all, current sharing.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, weather, world, storm, lightning, ontario
  • 9
    Jun
    2012
    5:33am, EDT

    Second solo Pacific rower rescued after 50-foot waves batter boat

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    A second solo Pacific rower caught in a tropical storm has been rescued, according to the adventurer's website.

    British ocean-rower Charlie Martell, 41, was picked up by the Russian crew of the MV Last Tycoon at around 9:18 a.m. local time Saturday (4:18 p.m. ET Friday), a message posted on Martell's website said.


    Martell was in good condition and was not injured, having waited on his rowing boat, 'Blossom,' for 36 hours after issuing a mayday signal. The Japanese coast guard alerted the Last Tycoon, which altered course to rescue Martell.

    In earlier reports posted on Martell's website, his support team said he was sustaining "35-foot waves and the occasional 50-footer. Yes, really."

    Another British adventurer, Sarah Outen, 27, was rescued on Friday by the Japanese Coast Guard, having survived the same storm -- which she described as "merciless."

    Solo Brit rower rescued after 'merciless' Pacific storm; another waits for help

    Outen had been on one leg of a round-the-world journey by bicycle, rowing boat and kayak that started on April 1 last year, and was attempting to be the first woman to row from Japan to Canada.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Martell, meanwhile, was attempting to set records for the fastest crossing of the North Pacific Ocean and the first unsupported row across the Pacific.

    He had been at sea since May 4 and was around 700 miles off the northeast coast of Japan when he issued the mayday signal.

    In the message on Martell's website, his support team thanked the Japanese coast guard for its effort in coordinating the rescue and to Martell's supporters for their "encouraging messages."

    The Last Tycoon was attempting to recover his damaged boat, his support team said.

    Martell is expected to arrive in Vancouver, Canada, in about 10 days.

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    • Women brave attack to protest Egypt harassment
    • In court, Italian showgirl reveals code name for Berlusconi
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    • Did Canada's alleged cannibal killer Luka Magnotta strike in LA?
    • TV show attack shows 'real face' of far-right in Greece?

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    55 comments

    I have no problem at all with those that wish to be adventurists. I just want them to pick up the tab for their rescue when things go wrong. There is a huge difference between the taxpayers picking up the tab of rescuing a school bus full of kids that fell through a collapsed bridge and some adventu …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, japan, russia, british, pacific, storm, ocean, featured, rower, charlie-martell
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