
More than 90 people have been killed by flooding and landslides triggered by heavy rain in the northern Philippines, reports say.
Local officials said at least 69 people were killed in Benguet province alone.
The country is still dealing with the devastating aftermath of Typhoons Ketsana and Parma.
There were reports that some of the latest landslides were caused by water that was released from dams in the wake of Typhoon Parma.
Typhoon Ketsana left at least 300 people dead and hundreds of thousands stranded, while Typhoon Parma caused further damage just over a week later.
Benguet provincial governor Nestor Fongwan told the AFP news agency that 69 people in the province had been killed across five districts.
Another 17 people were reported to have died in the city of Baguio and several more fatalities occurred in Mountain province. About 30 towns were flooded in Pangasinan province.
"The rains in this area are unprecedented," said Glen Rabonza, executive officer of the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC).
"We are stretched, no doubt, but we are responding in the best way we can," he told AFP.
The NDCC said
thousands of people had been stranded on rooftops and on higher ground.
UN appeal
The provincial governor of Pangasinan province, Amado Espino, told reporters that water released by the San Roque dam had flooded towns.
Benguet province had already been badly hit by storms
"The dam is supposed to be for flood control but now it is so filled it is like it is not there. The water just rushes right through from the mountains to Pangasinan."
Mr Espino said strong currents and continuing rain were making it hard to reach and rescue people in flooded areas.
The province's Vice Governor, Marlyn Premicias, told the Associated Press she had been receiving text messages from people needing to be rescued.
"Eastern Pangasinan has become one big river," she said.
Lt Col Ernesto Torres of the NDCC told Reuters news agency that 30,000 people had been evacuated in the province and 60-80% of the land was flooded.
The UN earlier appealed for $74m (£47m) to help victims of storms in the Philippines.
It says about 500,000 people have fled their homes and are still living in emergency shelters and has warned of an urgent need for food, water, sanitation facilities, emergency shelter and health care provisions.
Gwendolyn Pang of the Philippine National Red Cross told the BBC that getting aid to those in need was difficult as travelling by land was often impossible.
"Most of the areas are impassable because of landslides and because of the flood water, so we need to airlift relief food and also do rescues by airlift," she said.
Typhoon Ketsana hit Manila and surrounding areas on 26 September, causing the worst flooding in the capital in more than four decades.
Eight days later, Parma blew across the country's mountainous north, bringing more rain. Meteorologists say the storm is still lingering off the coast of the Philippines.
Local officials said at least 69 people were killed in Benguet province alone.
The country is still dealing with the devastating aftermath of Typhoons Ketsana and Parma.
There were reports that some of the latest landslides were caused by water that was released from dams in the wake of Typhoon Parma.
Typhoon Ketsana left at least 300 people dead and hundreds of thousands stranded, while Typhoon Parma caused further damage just over a week later.
Benguet provincial governor Nestor Fongwan told the AFP news agency that 69 people in the province had been killed across five districts.
Another 17 people were reported to have died in the city of Baguio and several more fatalities occurred in Mountain province. About 30 towns were flooded in Pangasinan province.
"The rains in this area are unprecedented," said Glen Rabonza, executive officer of the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC).
"We are stretched, no doubt, but we are responding in the best way we can," he told AFP.
The NDCC said

UN appeal
The provincial governor of Pangasinan province, Amado Espino, told reporters that water released by the San Roque dam had flooded towns.
Benguet province had already been badly hit by storms
"The dam is supposed to be for flood control but now it is so filled it is like it is not there. The water just rushes right through from the mountains to Pangasinan."
Mr Espino said strong currents and continuing rain were making it hard to reach and rescue people in flooded areas.
The province's Vice Governor, Marlyn Premicias, told the Associated Press she had been receiving text messages from people needing to be rescued.
"Eastern Pangasinan has become one big river," she said.
Lt Col Ernesto Torres of the NDCC told Reuters news agency that 30,000 people had been evacuated in the province and 60-80% of the land was flooded.
The UN earlier appealed for $74m (£47m) to help victims of storms in the Philippines.
It says about 500,000 people have fled their homes and are still living in emergency shelters and has warned of an urgent need for food, water, sanitation facilities, emergency shelter and health care provisions.
Gwendolyn Pang of the Philippine National Red Cross told the BBC that getting aid to those in need was difficult as travelling by land was often impossible.
"Most of the areas are impassable because of landslides and because of the flood water, so we need to airlift relief food and also do rescues by airlift," she said.
Typhoon Ketsana hit Manila and surrounding areas on 26 September, causing the worst flooding in the capital in more than four decades.
Eight days later, Parma blew across the country's mountainous north, bringing more rain. Meteorologists say the storm is still lingering off the coast of the Philippines.
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