Super Typhoon Mangkhut, an extremely dangerous Category 5 cyclone in the Pacific known as Super Typhoon Ompong in the Philippines, made landfall in the Philippines on Sept. 15.

PAGASA said the storm surge could be as high as 20 feet (6 meters) in Cagayan and 7 feet (2 meters) in Isabela.
“We are bracing for the worst here,” said Lanelyn Carrillo, a spokeswoman for World Vision, a humanitarian organization, CNN reported. “There is a sense of fear that we might be facing a storm as bad as Haiyan or Haima.” In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, known as Yolanda in the Philippines, killed 6,000 people.
“Some of those who refused to evacuate in Pasuquin town are now being dealt with by the police,” Governor Ma. Imelda Josefa “Imee” Marcos told the news agency.
According to forecasters, the storm is slated to pass through the Philippines before hitting southern China as well as Hong Kong
The Hong Kong Observatory said the typhoon posed “considerable threat” to its residents, Al Jazeera reported.
Before it hit the Philippines, Mangkhut slammed the American island territory of Guam on Sept. 13, knocking out 80 percent of the electricity, the Times reported.