Posted in News Philippines UK News World

Terrifying footage shows bridge shaking during 6.9 magnitude earthquake in the Philippines

‘There could be people still buried beneath collapsed structures.’

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Posted in Earthquakes News Philippines UK News World

Philippines rocked by huge 6.9 magnitude earthquake

It has hit near Leyte island, the eighth-largest island in the Philippines.

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Posted in China Hong Kong News Philippines Taiwan UK News Weather World

Super typhoon Ragasa forces 400,000 to evacuate their homes

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As many as 400,000 people are being evacuated from parts of China over a powerful typhoon that has slammed into the Philippines and Taiwan.

Schools and businesses have shut down, most flights have been grounded, and supermarket shelves are being emptied amid Super Typhoon Ragasa, which has already recorded wind speeds of about 137 mph.

Tens of millions of residents could be impacted as Ragasa is set to pass south of the major cities of Hong Kong, Macau, Shenzhen and Guangzhou, before making landfall again in the mainland Guangdong Province.

Entire megacities have been brought to a standstill as authorities issued dual red alerts for storm surges and high waves, warning that Guangdong will be hit by waves as high as 23 feet.

A rappel rescue in flood-hit municipality of Salcedo
Coastguard personnel conducting a rappel rescue in flood-hit municipality of Salcedo, Ilocos Sur province, Philippines (Picture: EPA)

Guangzhou – a city of 18.6 million people – may issue its highest red alert today.

And in Shenzhen – home to another 17.5 million – officials are preparing to relocate almost half a million residents from low-lying and coastal areas.

The National Meteorological Center said Ragasa would make landfall in the coastal area between Zhuhai and Zhanjiang cities between midday and evening on Wednesday.

What is the aftermath in the Philippines and Taiwan?

A handout photo taken on September 22, 2025 and received through the courtesy of Facebook page of Tuba Public Information Office on September 23, shows rescuers carrying an injured commuter on a stretcher after a landslide hit vehicles traversing a road at the height of Super Typhoon Ragasa in Tuba town, Benguet province, north of Manila. Ragasa had already toppled trees, tore the roofs off buildings and killed at least one person in a landslide while lashing the northern Philippines, where thousands sought shelter in schools and evacuation centres. (Photo by John Dimain / TUBA PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE / AFP) / -----EDITORS NOTE --- RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / TUBA PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE " - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS (Photo by JOHN DIMAIN/TUBA PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE/AFP via Getty Images)
Rescuers carrying an injured commuter on a stretcher after a landslide hit vehicles in Tuba town, Benguet province, north of Manila (Picture: AFP)

In the Philippines, at least three people have died and five others are still missing after Ragasa made landfall on Monday.

More than 17,500 people have since been displaced amid flooding and landslides set off by the most powerful storm to hit the Southeast Asian archipelago this year.

One of the victims is a 74-year-old man, who died while being brought to a hospital.

He had been pinned in one of four vehicles that were partly buried by mud, rocks and trees that cascaded down a mountainside onto a road in the mountain town of Tuba in Benguet province, officials said.

International Space Station flies over the eye of Typhoon Ragasa, September 22, 2025, in this still image obtained from social media video. NASA via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY.
International Space Station flies over the eye of Typhoon Ragasa (Picture: Reuters)

Two other villagers died in the storm, including a resident in Calayan town.

Ragasa prompted the Philippine government on Monday to close schools and government offices in the densely populated capital region and 29 northern provinces.

Fishing boats and ferries were prohibited from venturing into very rough seas and domestic flights were cancelled.

In Taiwan, at least six people were injured and more than 7,000 residents were evacuated as the typhoon swept south of the island.

DONGGUAN, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 22: Almost-empty shelves are seen as residents stock up on supplies at a supermarket to brace for super typhoon Ragasa on September 22, 2025 in Dongguan, Guangdong Province of China. Ragasa, the 18th named storm of the 2025 Pacific typhoon season, intensified into a super typhoon on September 21, and is forecast to likely make landfall along the central or western coastal areas of Guangdong Province on September 24. (Photo by Zhou Nan/VCG via Getty Images)
Almost-empty shelves are seen as residents stock up on supplies in Dongguan, Guangdong Province of China (Picture: Getty)

What is a super typhoon?

The term ‘super typhoon’ is used for the most intense type of typhoon, characterised by its extremely high sustained wind speeds, typically exceeding 150 mph.

A hurricane is the same weather phenomenon, but is given that name when it forms over different geographic regions, specifically the North Atlantic and the Northeast and Central Pacific oceans.

A super typhoon is the equivalent of a strong category 4 or category 5 hurricane.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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Posted in China News Philippines UK News World

Chinese warship ploughs into own coast guard chasing Phillippine vessel

The Philippine coast guard released a video taken by one of its vessels.

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Posted in Beirut Immigration Lebanon News Philippines Racism UK News World

I was ordered out of a swimming pool just for being a nanny – my whole body was shaking

A 'no swimming' ban in front of a pool
Jane Tiozen, a domestic worker from the Philippines, was banned from swimming at a beach club in Lebanon (Picture: Getty/Metro)

The uncomfortable looks came first. As Jane Tiozen, a domestic worker from the Philippines, dipped her feet in the swimming pool of an upscale beach club in Lebanon, she could feel the disapproving eyes of guests on her.

That is when the lifeguard ordered the 33-year-old to exit the pool as ‘the help is not allowed to swim in it.’

Jane, who has worked as a nanny for a family in Beirut for eight years, told Metro: ‘I could sense something was off.

‘Then the lifeguard approached me and told me to get out of the pool. “You are not allowed to swim,” he said.

‘I was shocked. Everyone was staring at me. My whole body was shaking and I could feel that I was starting to cry.’

Incidents of racial and class-based segregation, like this one, are a window into Lebanon’s kafala system, considered a form of modern-day slavery by some human rights organisations.

Under this legal framework – also operating in Jordan and many Gulf states – migrant domestic workers are bound to their employers and denied basic labour rights. Employers are even permitted to take away their passports.

As a result, in many beach resorts across Lebanon, unwritten rules dictate that those considered ‘the help’ are not allowed in pools.

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Aware of the physical and sexual abuse that some of her colleagues face, Jane admitted she is ‘one of the lucky ones’ to find a ‘good’ family.

The single mother explained that the incident on June 13 is the first time she has experienced such direct discrimination, but claimed there is a lot of racism in Lebanon and it has become socially acceptable.

Her employer, Maya Nassar, a radio host on Virgin Radio Lebanon and ‘Ms Fitness Universe 2025’, was appalled at how staff treated Jane and caused a scandal, as she put it.

Having grown up in the country, she is aware of this ‘unwritten rule,’ but it was the first time she witnessed it.

The mother-of-four told Metro: ‘There are beach clubs that have rules that people of colour cannot swim in the pools, essentially targeting those who come to Lebanon mostly to work in a house as a helper or as a nanny.

‘These are typically low-paid jobs. There is this horrible mentality that they are not clean, that they have diseases, they are not classy. People want to keep beach clubs “high-end” and having these workers swim is seen as “low class”.

‘I have no idea why these rules still exist. Jane is part of the family and we were extremely angry and upset for her. My children were very confused as they did not understand why she is not allowed in the pool with us.’

Recalling the incident, Maya said that the lifeguard tried to make excuses, saying that he was ‘just doing my job and my job is not to allow maids and helpers to swim’.

Jane Tiozen
Almost two months after the incident, Jane still feels anxious when she is in public in Lebanon

She added: ‘What really annoyed me is that he stereotyped Jane. Because she is Asian, he decided that she is the nanny.

‘She could have been anyone. She could have been an ambassador. But he profiled her.’

Neither Jane nor Maya want to name the beach club where the incident happened.

Instead, Maya wishes to pressure the industry as a whole into overturning their internal ‘racist’ policies and in general, help change public perception that domestic workers from South East Asia and Africa ‘spread disease or that they are inferior to us.’

She posted a video on Instagram, where she boasts more than 300,000 followers, in which she and Jane detail what happened at the beach club.

Since releasing it, Maya has been approached by hundreds of people who claim that their employees were also discriminated against at resorts in Lebanon.

Others have not been so kind to her campaign. Maya shared screengrabs of her WhatsApp chat with mothers at her children’s school.

One of them read: ‘The beach resorts are not discriminating – they are just responding to the high demand from their regular visitors and owners.

Maya with her four children and partner
Maya Nassar has launched a campaign on Instagram to overturn resorts’ internal ‘racist’ policies

‘Implementing rules based on this demand is a business decision, not a form of discrimination. Calling for a boycott would likely cause more harm than good, and it is not a solution we should support.’

A recent discussion in the r/Lebanese group on Reddit also proved that Jane’s experience is not unique.

User John Aiden complained that his children’s nanny, who is Filipino, is not allowed to enter most pools in Lebanon.

He wrote: ‘It seems to offend people for some reason. The same goes for beaches (supposed to be public!) and on top of that, they are asking her to wear a bikini, which she does not feel comfortable with [because of her religion].’.

Under Lebanese law, denying people access to swimming pools – public or private – based on skin colour or socio-economic status is considered to be discriminatory and potentially illegal, but enforcement varies greatly.

Maya compared it to the 2011 public smoking ban – a major cultural shock in the country.

She said: ‘The law is not enforced. It is like smoking. Smoking is illegal in public spaces and restaurants. But it is not applied.

‘People smoke anywhere and everywhere. So, it is the same with the beach clubs.

‘Many people feel that they are high class, they are sophisticated. It is a very sick and wrong thing that is happening in our country and I really wish that this would stop.’

In 2006, filmmaker Carol Mansour produced a documentary called ‘Maid in Lebanon’ depicting the gamble these women take when they go to work in the country.

Almost 20 years later, not much seems to have changed for the 200,000 migrant domestic workers, and racism is only one of the issues they face.

Human Rights Watch and Lebanese organisations have documented for years how the kafala system gives employers huge control over workers’ lives, leading to an array of abuses, including forced confinement, and verbal, physical, and sexual abuse.

Aya Majzoub, former Lebanon researcher at HRW, said about the system in 2020: ‘Lebanon’s restrictive and exploitative kafala system traps tens of thousands of migrant domestic workers in potentially harmful situations by tying their legal status to their employer, enabling highly abusive conditions amounting at worst to modern-day slavery.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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Posted in California Canada China Earthquakes Ecuador Hawaii Japan Mexico News Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre Peru Philippines Russia Taiwan Tonga UK News World

Map shows where tsunami warnings are in place after 8.8-magnitude earthquake

A map shows where the warning and other alerts for tsunami are in the Pacific (Picture: Metro)

A map shows the epicentre of one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded, along with large parts of the Pacific Ocean now under tsunami w…

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Posted in China News Philippines UK News Vietnam World

Dog survives after 30-tonne boulder crashes into family’s driveway

Black aspin Moana somehow escaped after the huge rock crushed her cage outside the house in Benguet province in the Philippines.

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Posted in Crime News News Philippines UK News World

Dozens of cockfighting gamblers ‘strangled to death and dumped in volcanic lake’

Lake searches for the missing cockfighters are starting today (Picture: AFP/Getty)

Lake searches for 34 missing cockfighters allegedly murdered by rogue police officers have kicked off in the Philippines today.

Search teams arrived at Lak…

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Posted in Animals News Philippines UK News World

Tourist taking selfie with ‘fake’ crocodile realises his mistake the hard way

The man climbed over a fence to get to the ‘statue’.

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Posted in Animals News Philippines UK News Weird news World

Mystery as tourist finds alien-like creature which ‘looks like a condom’ on beach

‘At first, I thought it was a plastic bag floating by the sea. but upon closer inspection, I was surprised because it was moving.’

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