In Liloan, a coastal city in Cebu Province of the Philippines and one of the areas hardest hit by Typhoon Kalmaegi, desperate residents are still waiting for any information of the loved ones who vanished in the violent tropical storm-triggered floods.
Typhoon Kalmaegi made landfall in the Philippines on Tuesday, triggering massive flooding that submerged houses up to the roofs, swept away countless cars, and displaced thousands of villagers.
As of 06:00 Saturday, the death toll from Typhoon Kalmaegi has climbed to 204, with 109 more still listed as missing, according to the country's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
Many residents have held funerals for the victims, and waiting for information, if any, from search and rescue teams about their missing family members.
"We are in deep grief now. We cannot escape the pain of what has happened. We have lost parents, husband, and children. This is the situation we face now. We are keeping vigil over the bodies. Our family is incomplete, with some members still missing, and we don't know if we will ever find them," said Viola Danlag, a resident. "Before the winds intensified, some government officials and village officers patrolled around in a dump truck. But they just walked around and didn't tell us what was going to happen next. We could only observe the weather to see if it would rain. They didn't clearly tell us we should evacuate, or warn us that there would be severe floods. It started from light rain, but quickly turned into floods. Everything happened rapidly. When the typhoon actually hit, there was absolutely no rescue effort. There were no rubber boats. And I believe that even if there were, we wouldn't have been able to escape such a severe flash flood," said Rose Aranez, another resident.
The search and rescue work for the missing have still been underway in the country.
According to the data released, nearly 30,000 houses were damaged across the Philippines, along with 157 public facilities, including hospitals and schools.
Power supply was disrupted in 162 municipalities, and communications were affected in 86. Agricultural losses exceeded 40 million pesos (about 680,230 U.S. dollars).
Philippine President Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos declared a state of national calamity on Thursday.
Kalmaegi was the 20th typhoon to slam the Philippine archipelago so far this year.
Philippine residents hit hard by Typhoon Kalmaegi still waiting for missing family members
Philippine residents hit hard by Typhoon Kalmaegi still waiting for missing family members
More than 770 high-tech companies have packed into 33 themed buildings at China's Xiong'an New Area, turning floor proximity into business partnerships in a government-engineered experiment to build innovation clusters outside the capital Beijing.
On April 1, 2017, China announced plans to establish the Xiong'an New Area, located about 100 kilometers southwest of Beijing. The aim was to build a green city on an area of 1,770 square kilometers, featuring innovation and providing a national model of high-quality development.
Over the past nine years, facilities such as the Zhongguancun Science Park have begun high-quality operations in Xiong'an. In the Zhongguancun Science Park's low-altitude economy building, Zhu Xu, co-founder of a Beijing drone company, dropped in on a company located one floor below his to explore collaboration opportunities.
As the building houses numerous upstream and downstream enterprises in the low-altitude economy industry, with potential partners just a floor or two away, Zhu frequently receives invitations to matchmaking events where participants analyze the market and discuss technologies together.
"(The Zhongguancun Science Park) organizes matchmaking events on a regular basis. At one such session, we learned about a company on the 7th floor that share some technical similarities with us. We spoke with them promptly, and now we are gradually carrying out research and development and cooperation together," said Zhu.
Zhu's company moved to Xiong'an in Oct 2025. Shortly after relocating, Zhu began joint research and development with the company on the 7th floor. Together, they have upgraded drones to support remote intelligent ground operation, quickly developing a mature autonomous drone operation system.
"We open up real-world application scenarios to enterprises. Through various activities, companies link up naturally, and collaborations within the building have happened effortlessly," said Li Yue, deputy head of the Industry, Information Technology and Data Bureau of the Xiong'an New Area.
Zhu is among many people who pursue a career and a life in the Xiong'an New Area, which has been transformed from a stretch of raw land to a mapped plan, and then to a city -- a modern new town springing up in a matter of nine years.
In the process of relieving Beijing of functions non-essential to its role as China's capital, renowned universities and research institutes, major state-owned companies as well as start-ups are relocated to this vibrant area.
So far, more than 4,000 Beijing-origin companies have been relocated to Xiong'an, and more than 400 centrally administrated state-owned enterprises have set branches in the city.
Construction is rapidly ongoing on the campus buildings of four universities in the Xiong'an New Area -- Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing University of Science and Technology, Beijing Forestry University and China University of Geosciences.
In less than a decade, Xiong'an has adhered to high standards of planning and design, adopting a "moving in after infrastructure is in place" approach, ensuring that networks of water, electricity, gas, roads and bridges are established first.
Dubbed the "city of the future", Xiong'an is undergoing rapid changes. The developed area spans around 215 square kilometers with total investment exceeding one trillion yuan (about 145 billion U.S. dollars) and over 5,300 buildings shaping the urban skyline, housing 1.41 million residents and 669 high-tech enterprises.
Meanwhile, Xiong'an is becoming greener and more biodiverse. Since 2017, a total of 32,200 hectares of new afforested land has emerged in Xiong'an, bringing the total green area to nearly 50,000 hectares. The forest coverage rate has risen from 11 percent to 35.1 percent, according to official data.
China's Xiong'an New Area clusters tech firms in themed towers, spurring vertical supply chains