By Ian C. Sayson
Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) -- At least 804 people have been killed or are missing after Supertyphoon Durian smashed into the Philippines, causing flooding and the most rainfall in four decades, officials said.
The typhoon, which hit the Philippines on Nov. 30, killed at least 406 people and injured 489 others, Paul Pagaran, a coordinator at the Philippine National Red Cross, said. As many as 398 people are missing, he said. ``Search and rescue operations are still on-going,'' Pagaran said in a telephone interview. ``The number of deaths will most likely go up because we are still confirming some cases and there are areas that haven't been reached yet by help.''
Durian brought 249 kilometer an hour (155 mile an hour) winds and heavy rain that caused floods and mudslides in southeast Luzon, the nation's main island. It's the ninth tropical storm and typhoon to make landfall this year in the Philippines. The rainfall reached 466 millimeters, the country's largest since 1967, and exceeded the monthly amount in Albay, one of the provinces hardest hit, a government official said.
``The storm poured in one day an amount of rain that's greatly more than what that area gets in a month,'' Renato Solidum, director at the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, said yesterday in a telephone interview. ``When you have such a big volume of rain, you see a lot of floods and landslides.''
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