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Philippines suspends classes and work as super-typhoon Luzon barrels towards Luzon

On Monday, the Philippines halted work and school in Metro Manila and other parts of the nation as Super Typhoon Ragasa approached northern Luzon. The storm was expected to bring destructive winds and heavy rainfall.

The state weather officials issued the strongest typhoon alert over the remote Babuyan Islands. They urged residents of low-lying coastal and low-lying communities to evacuate before storm surges or flooding could occur.

Ragasa, with sustained winds up to 205 kph and gusts as high as 250 kph was expected to land or brush the Babuyan Islands at midday. It would then cross the Luzon Strait.

The outer band of the typhoon is expected to bring heavy rainfall to Taiwan's sparsely-populated east coast. Taiwan has issued sea and land warnings, and cancelled flights for eastern cities such as Taitung and Hualien.

It is predicted that the storm will hit Hong Kong after it has blown toward the coasts of southern China. Bloomberg News reported that the financial hub is urging residents to be prepared for one of strongest typhoons for years. It may even close its airport for 36-hours.

Forecasters in the Philippines warned of power outages and landslides as outer bands of the storm began to hit northern Luzon. More than a dozen flights have been cancelled, mostly on Luzon-bound routes. Ports have also suspended ferry services.

(source: Reuters)