A Filipino soldier carries a child after
landslides at a road leading to Real
town November 30, 2004 in Quezon
province east of Manila. About 200
people died after flash floods and
landslides devastated several coastal
towns and left swathes of the northern
Philippines under water, officials said
on Tuesday. REUTERS/Erik de
Castro
REF: QUE03D2
%method>
Filipino children walk in knee-deep mud
after landslides at a road leading to
Real town November 30, 2004 in Quezon
province east of Manila. About 200
people died after flash floods and
landslides devastated several coastal
towns and left swathes of the northern
Philippines under water, officials said
on Tuesday. REUTERS/Erik De
Castro
REF: QUE05D2
%method>
Filipino villagers walk in knee-deep mud
after landslides at a road leading to
Real town November 30, 2004 in Quezon
province east of Manila. About 200
people died after flash floods and
landslides devastated several coastal
towns and left swathes of the northern
Philippines under water, officials said
on Tuesday. REUTERS/Erik de
Castro
REF: QUE01D2
%method>
Filipino residents use metal poles to
dig out a jeep stuck in mud due to the
flash floods caused by typhoon Winnie in
the San Ildefonso town of Bulacan, north
of Manila, November 30, 2004. About 200
people died after flash floods and
landslides devastated several coastal
towns and left swathes of the northern
Philippines under water, officials said
on Tuesday. REUTERS/Romeo
Ranoco
REF: MAN011D
%method>
Filipino passengers wait atop a bus
after being stranded by flash floods
caused by typhoon Winnie in Gapan Nueva
Ecija province, north of Manila,
November 30, 2004. About 200 people died
after flash floods and landslides
devastated several coastal towns and
left swathes of the northern Philippines
under water, officials said on Tuesday.
REUTERS/Romeo
Ranoco
REF: MAN06D
%method>
Filipino flood victims wait to be
rescued from their roof-top after being
stranded by flash floods caused by
typhoon Winnie in Gapan, Nueva Ecija
province, north of Manila, November 30,
2004. About 200 people died after flash
floods and landslides devastated several
coastal towns and left swathes of the
northern Philippines under water,
officials said on Thursday. REUTERS/
Romeo
Ranoco
REF: MAN09D
%method>
Filipino passengers wait atop a bus
after being stranded by flash floods
caused by typhoon Winnie in Gapan, Nueva
Ecija province, north of Manila,
November 30, 2004 . About 200 people
died after flash floods and landslides
devastated several coastal towns and
left swathes of the northern Philippines
under water, officials said on Tuesday.
REUTERS/Romeo
Ranoco
REF: MAN07D
%method>
A flood victim sits atop the ruins of
his home a day after the tropical
depression Winnie hit the village of San
Jose in the province of Rizal November
30, 2004. About 200 people died after
flash floods and landslides devastated
several coastal towns and left swathes
of the northern Philippines under water,
officials said on Tuesday.REUTERS/
Cheryl
Ravelo
REF: MAN03D.
%method>




