TRANSCRIPT
[footage]
0.23
Across the Philippines, the flood spreads across towns and fields with a slow, merciless force. The skies may have cleared, but the water remains, swallowing entire streets and drowning familiar places. From tightly packed villages to wide open plains, the landscape now moves under a restless blanket of brown water. [footage]
1.22
Families recount how the water rose silently at first, slipping under doors and across floors. By the time they noticed, it was already climbing staircases, covering tables, and pushing furniture aside. For many, the real panic began after the rain stopped because the flood only grew stronger. [footage]
2.30
More than 4.6 million people have been caught in this widening disaster. Whole baron guys sit trapped with no access except by boat or makeshift rafts. Rescue teams navigate streets so deep that rooftops and electric posts are the only visible markers. [footage]
3.43
Experts explain that with the ground fully saturated, every drop of water travels straight into rivers and lowlands. Drainage canals overflow, spillways choke with debris, and waterways push water back into towns. This is why the flood refuses to go down. It has nowhere else to go. [footage]
4.50
Major rivers spilled far beyond their boundaries, transforming fields and highways into wide channels. Where traffic once moved freely, now boats weave their way through strong swirling currents. Entire regions have lost mobility as the country's lifelines vanish under the flood. [footage]
5.40
More than 75,000 homes are damaged with over 10,700 completely destroyed, concrete walls cracked under pressure. Wooden houses drifted away in the current. Belongings floated out of open windows. Clothes, books, appliances, school bags, all carried by the rising water. [footage]
6.37
At night, the darkness makes everything more terrifying. Families wait on rooftops holding flashlights, listening for the faint engine of a rescue boat. Some shout across the water, hoping other neighbors are still alive and waiting. [footage]
7.24
Entire communities remain isolated as deep water and landslides block every access route. What used to be a 10-minute drive now requires a boat journey through dangerous channels. Supplies arrive slowly, often only when conditions allow a single rescue boat to pass. [footage]
8.12
Evacuation centers overflow with families who carry only what they could save. Classrooms meant for students now shelter dozens of evacuees sleeping on thin mats. The air is heavy with exhaustion, damp clothes, and the quiet fear of uncertainty. [footage]
8.54
Doctors warned that the flood carries invisible threats, contaminated water, infection, fever, and disease. Children develop rashes. Wounds become serious within hours. Mobile health teams travel non-stop, treating as many as they can with the limited supplies they have. [footage]
9.37
Rice fields lie beneath deep water. Their crops lost for the season. Fish farms washed out, livestock drowned, and plantation lands turned into stagnant lakes. Farmers face months of rebuilding with little left to support their families. [footage]
10.17
Rescue crews push through debris filled currents, often unable to see what lies beneath the surface. Every submerged car or fallen beam becomes a hidden danger that can overturn a small boat. Still, rescuers continue house-to-house searches, calling into windows for anyone still inside. [footage]
11.00
White flags tied to stick signal hunger. Red flags call for urgent medical help. These simple markers guide rescuers across neighborhoods swallowed by water. Behind each flag is a family waiting for help. Unsure how long relief will take.[footage]
11.40
Entire towns remain without electricity. Nights are completely dark, roads gone, lights out, and only the moon reflecting off the water. Residents stay alert, worrying the water might rise again. [footage]
12.22
The emotional weight grows each day. Parents wonder how they will rebuild. Children ask when home will return to normal. For many elderly residents, the sight of a submerged hometown is heartbreaking. [footage]
12.55
Engineers warned that water may take weeks to recede due to clogged spillways and flat terrain. Residents mark water lines on their walls, checking each hour for change. Every centimeter of drop brings relief and fear that it may rise again. [footage]
13.27
Despite everything, communities show remarkable unity. Neighbors share food with those who have none. Volunteers arrive from surrounding towns, bringing water, blankets, and hope. [footage]
Communication failures isolate many regions completely. Families in shelters anxiously wait for news from missing relatives. Every message delivered brings either immense relief or painful silence.
14.30
Highways once filled with cars now lie beneath deep unmoving water. Abandoned vehicles sit half submerged, scattered across what used to be busy roads. Travel has become a challenge, requiring boats for even the simplest movement. [footage]
15.10
When the water finally leaves, it will reveal thick mud, shattered walls, broken furniture, and debris. Rebuilding will demand strength, patience, and time, far more than many families possess right now. But the work will begin the moment the ground appears again. The flood may command the land today, but the resilience of the Filipino people remains stronger than the waters that try to break them. Together, step by step, they will rise again. One home, one street, one community at a time.
***
END OF TRANSCRIPT Xtreme TV, on YouTube from USA since 2021
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