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Philippines warns of deadly storm surges as massive Typhoon Fung-wong nears super typhoon strength

Philippines warns of deadly storm surges as massive Typhoon Fung-wong nears super typhoon strength
A satellite image shows Storm Fung-Wong, which has intensified into a typhoon, over the Philippine Sea on Nov. 7, 2025. (CSU/CIRA & JMA/JAXA via Reuters)
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Updated 20 sec ago

Philippines warns of deadly storm surges as massive Typhoon Fung-wong nears super typhoon strength

Philippines warns of deadly storm surges as massive Typhoon Fung-wong nears super typhoon strength
  • The typhoon’s massive circulation, spanning 1,500 kilometers, is already lashing parts of eastern Philippines with heavy rains and winds
  • Weather forecaster urged residents in low-lying and coastal areas to evacuate to higher ground and halt all marine activities

MANILA: The Philippines’ weather bureau warned of life-threatening storm surges of up to five meters and destructive winds as Typhoon Fung-wong churns toward the country’s eastern coast, where it is forecast to intensify into a super typhoon before making landfall on Sunday night.
The typhoon’s massive circulation, spanning 1,500 kilometers (932 miles), is already lashing parts of eastern Philippines with heavy rains and winds, PAGASA weather forecaster Benison Estareja said in a briefing.
“It can cover almost the entire country,” Estareja said.
Fung-wong, locally named Uwan, is currently packing maximum sustained winds of 140 kph and gusts of up to 170 kph, and could intensify to 185 kph as it nears land, Estareja said, powerful enough to destroy homes, topple trees and structures.
Up to 200 mm of rainfall is expected in eastern Philippine provinces, particularly in the Bicol region, as well as parts of Samar, raising the risk of widespread flooding and landslides, while northern and central Luzon could see 100-200 mm rainfall during its passage.
PAGASA urged residents in low-lying and coastal areas to evacuate to higher ground and halt all marine activities, warning of destructive storm surges that could inundate coastal communities, and warned of violent winds.
Several local governments have suspended classes for Monday, and the Philippines’ flag carrier has canceled some flights, ahead of Fung-wong’s expected landfall.
The warning comes just days after Typhoon Kalmaegi left a trail of destruction across the region, ripping through coastal communities, toppling trees, and shredding roofs and windows.
Kalmaegi killed 204 people in the Philippines and five in Vietnam, displaced hundreds of thousands, and knocked out power across wide areas.
Vietnam’s disaster agency reported damage to nearly 2,800 homes, and said about 500,000 people remain without electricity. In the Philippines, raging floods destroyed homes and clogged streets with debris.
Vietnam and the Philippines are highly vulnerable to tropical storms and typhoons due to their locations along the Pacific typhoon belt, regularly experiencing damage and casualties during peak storm seasons.
In Thailand, Kalmaegi’s lingering impact caused heavy rain and localized flooding in parts of the northeast and central regions.
Scientists have warned that storms such as Kalmaegi are becoming more powerful as global temperatures rise.


US judge rules Trump illegally ordered National Guard to Portland, Oregon

US judge rules Trump illegally ordered National Guard to Portland, Oregon
Updated 22 sec ago

US judge rules Trump illegally ordered National Guard to Portland, Oregon

US judge rules Trump illegally ordered National Guard to Portland, Oregon
  • Ruling blocks Trump administration from deploying National Guard to Portland
  • Judge finds protests were not a rebellion against the government

US President Donald Trump unlawfully ordered National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon, a federal judge ruled Friday in a legal setback to the administration’s use of the military in American cities.

The ruling by US District Judge Karin Immergut is the first to permanently block Trump’s use of military force to quell protests against immigration authorities. Trump is also attempting to do that in Democratic-led Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington, D.C. It replaces her interim order that had prevented the Portland deployment.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement Friday that Trump had exercised his lawful authority to protect federal officers.

“President Trump will not turn a blind eye to the lawlessness plaguing American cities and we expect to be vindicated by a higher court,” Jackson said.

The Oregon Attorney General’s Office did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Trump breaks with norms on using military

Immergut, a Trump appointee, said the administration had no lawful basis to claim that there was a rebellion in Portland or that the government was unable to enforce federal law due to the protests.

“The occasional interference to federal officers has been minimal, and there is no evidence that these small-scale protests have significantly impeded the execution of any immigration laws,” she said in her 106-page opinion and order.

Trump’s attempts to use military force to tamp down unrest are a sharp break with long-standing but rarely tested norms against deploying troops on US soil.

The Trump administration is likely to appeal Friday’s ruling, and the case could ultimately reach the Supreme Court.

The City of Portland and Oregon Attorney General’s Office sued in September, alleging the Trump administration was exaggerating occasional violence to justify sending in troops under a law permitting presidents to do so in cases of rebellion.

Judges rule Trump exceeded legal authority

Dueling narratives emerged during a three-day bench trial.

Justice Department lawyers described a violent siege overwhelming federal agents, echoing Trump’s description of the city as “war-ravaged.” Lawyers for Oregon and Portland said violence has been rare, isolated and contained by local police.

Immergut concluded in her order that the violence was small-scale, isolated, disorganized and had largely subsided by the time Trump ordered in the National Guard in late September.

Democrats have said Trump is abusing military powers meant for genuine emergencies such as an invasion or an armed rebellion.

Immergut blocked Trump from deploying troops to Portland with an interim order on October 5.

The Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals is considering the Trump administration’s appeal of that decision.

Three judges, including Immergut, have issued preliminary rulings that Trump’s National Guard deployments are not allowed under the emergency legal authority cited by his administration.