Earth Changes
At least 10,000 people are thought to have died in the central Philippine province of Leyte after Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall, lashed the area, swallowing coastal towns, a senior police official said early on Sunday morning.
About 70-80% of the buildings in the area in the path of Haiyan in Leyte province was destroyed, said chief superintendent Elmer Soria. "We had a meeting last night with the governor and the other officials. The governor said based on their estimate, 10,000 died," he said.
Tacloban city administrator Tecson Lim said that the death toll in that city alone "could go up to 10,000". Tacloban is the provincial capital of Leyte, with a population of more than 200,000. The Philippine Red Cross said in Tacloban bodies had been found "piled up around the roads" and in churches. Between 300 and 400 bodies had been recovered, Lim said.
Three siblings were killed and another three persons injured when the roof of a house collapsed at the Chinary area of the Safi Tehsil in the Mohmand Agency. The Mohmand administration officials said the roof of the house of Mukammal Khan fell down as a result of the two days rain.
Three children, who were guests and had come from Hyderabad were killed on the spot. The victims were identified as seven years old Qadir, three-year- old Halima Bibi and two-year-old Adnan, all children of Abdus Samad. The three injured were identified as Mukammal Khan, his wife and a daughter, Sameera.
The rain and snowfall continued in various areas of the Malakand division. The tourist resorts of the Swat district such as Kalam, Malam Jaba and other adjoining areas received snowfall. The snowfall and the rainfall confined the people to houses. The mountains in Lower Dir, Upper Dir, Buner, Shangla, Malakand Agency and Chitral received more snowfall.
Highways closed. Residents asked not to leave their settlements.
Federal highway between Khabarovsk and Komsomolsk-on-Amur closed on Thursday due to heavy snowfall. According to the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Russia in Khabarovsk region , the movement of vehicles will be prohibited until further notice.
Due to blowing snow and icy conditions on the roads, MOE has asked residents not to leave their settlements, drivers and pedestrians to be extra careful on the roads, observe speed limits, not to violate the rules of the road .
Meanwhile in Khabarovsk on some highways were formed congestion due to numerous accidents.
Also because of the snowstorm observed disruptions Khabarovsk Airport.
Thanks to Argiris Diamantis for this link.
Higher reaches of Dharamshala, Shimla, Kinnaur and Chamba also received heavy snowfall in the last 48 hours.
Most popular tourist places in Himachal Pradesh received two feet thick snowfall on Thursday, reported India TV.
At present, even pedestrians are not being allowed to cross Rohtang (13,050 feet) where high velocity cold winds and blizzards may kill people. Eight people were killed in a similar attempt to cross Rohtang in November 2009.
A resident of Keylong, Kumari Anita, said, "We had come to Kullu to buy rations and woollens before the closure of Rohtang Pass for the next six months. But the sudden snowfall has forced us to take shelter at a relative's house. We have a jeep full of essential commodities which we need to take home soon after opening of the road."
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Heavy-snowfall-in-Himachal-Pardesh-disrupts-normal-life/articleshow/25461934.cms
http://www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/520562/20131108/himachal-pradesh-manali-rohtang-pass-snowfall-weather.htm
Thanks to Argiris Diamantis for these links
This comes as a government body rejected concern about a potential environmental phenomenon behind the massive number of dead oysters reported recently at the Khairan beach. "The dead oysters were likely disposed by people who caught them for consumption or to look for pearl", said Dr Muna Husain, head of the biodiversity protection department at the Environment Public Authority. She further added in a statement Thursday that "dead oysters naturally do not float to the surface, but remain attached to the seafloor or rocks near the beach".

A view of destroyed houses after super Typhoon Haiyan battered Tacloban city in central Philippines November 9, 2013
The typhoon has devastated up to 80 percent of the Leyte province area as it ripped through the Philippines, Chief Superintendent Elmer Soria told Reuters.
"We had a meeting last night with the governor and other officials. The governor said based on their estimate, 10,000 died," Soria said.
The Red Cross said earlier that 1,200 people we confirmed dead in the Philippines.

Super Typhoon Haiyan has battered the Philippines with ferocious winds of up to 320 km/h (199mph). Although not the most powerful storm to have ever formed in recorded history, it could be the strongest at the time of landfall.
The agency said that at least 1,000 had been killed in Tacloban and 200 in Samar province. The typhoon has passed over the Philippines and is expected to hit Vietnam later today. Communication and transports links have been disrupted by the storm making it difficult to assess damage and offer assistance.
Gwendolyn Pang, secretary general of the Philippine Red Cross, said the numbers came from preliminary reports by Red Cross teams in Tacloban and Samar, among the most devastated areas hit by typhoon Haiyan on Friday.
"An estimated more than 1,000 bodies were seen floating in Tacloban as reported by our Red Cross teams," she told Reuters. "In Samar, about 200 deaths. Validation is ongoing."
The death toll from typhoon Haiyan is expected to rise sharply as rescue workers reach areas cut off by the fast-moving storm, whose circumference eclipsed the whole country and which late on Saturday was heading for Vietnam.
Officials with the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish investigated the mysterious elk deaths and ruled out several possible causes for the elk deaths, including poachers, anthrax, lightning strikes, epizootic hemorrhagic disease (an often-fatal virus known to affect deer and other ruminants), botulism, poisonous plants, malicious poisoning and even some sort of indupond scumstrial or agricultural accident.
The investigation was hampered by the state of the elk: Scavengers, including bears and vultures, ate most of the bodies, with maggots and blowflies helping to reduce the elk herd to an eerie scattered sea of skeletons in the desert.
"We couldn't find anything (toxic) in their stomachs and no toxic plants on the landscape," said Kerry Mower, a wildlife disease specialist with New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, as quoted by the Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper.
According to The U.S. Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center, which measures average wind speed accurate to every minute, that makes Haiyan more powerful than the 1969 Hurricane Camille, which battered Mississippi in the United States with winds of 190mph.
The Filipino government said the storm has claimed three victims after one person was electrocuted by damaged power lines and another was crushed by a falling tree. It is unclear how the third died but another man is missing after he fell off a jeti in the central port of Cebu. According to authorities the death toll is expected to rise, with emergency services unable to immediately contact the worst affected areas and Haiyan only expected to leave the Philippines this evening.
Additional images
Brazil's benchmark IPCA consumer price index rose 5.84 percent in the 12 months through October, nearly unchanged from its 5.87 percent 12-month advance through September, statistics agency IBGE said on Thursday.
The central bank targets inflation at 4.5 percent, with a tolerance margin of 2 percentage points. It was the fourth consecutive month of decline in the annual inflation rate after inflation peaked at 6.70 percent in June.
On a monthly basis, the IPCA index rose 0.57 percent, up from 0.35 percent in the prior month and close to the 0.60 percent median forecast of 31 economists.
Food prices jumped 1.03 percent from September, the most since March. Tomatoes, which symbolized a surge in food costs that pushed inflation above the government's target earlier this year, got 18.65 percent more expensive last month. Poultry and beef prices also rose more than 3 percent.











Comment: Update 10 November 2013:
The wind speed was not recorded at 395km/h, as we previously reported. At least, we have found no independent confirmation of that. Instead it appears that some broadcasters such as the BBC mistakenly translated 235km/h into '235mph' and the storm suddenly became something bigger than it actually was.
Anthony Watts has more on this here.
Nevertheless, the storm does appear to have wrought severe destruction on another defenceless country whose leaders are more concerned with appeasing the CEO Gods of Multinational Corporations than developing infrastructure to mitigate Nature's forces and improve the people's well-being.