Official says 63 survivors were pulled from the water after 3 ferries capsized in bad weather.

At least eleven people have died and three others were missing after three ferry boats capsized in rough seas off the central Philippines, according to local officials.

Sixty-three survivors were plucked from the water on Saturday after huge waves swamped the boats in the Guimaras Strait, regional police chief Rene Pamuspusan told reporters.

All three vessels plied the short 20-minute hop between the port city of Iloilo and the island of Guimaras, with two of the accidents happening at almost the same time, forcing the coastguard to temporarily shut down ferry services.

Services resumed in the afternoon, which was when the third boat capsized, the coastguard said.

“The winds and the waves suddenly became strong,” coastguard spokesman Armand Balilo told reporters, adding that one of the ferry boats, M/B Chichi, was carrying at least 42 passengers.

Ten of the fatalities were onboard the M/B Chichi, which capsized after being battered by strong winds and huge waves.

Another boat, M/B Keizha, reportedly had four crewmen on board, while the third ferry, M/B Jenny, had roughly 30 passengers on board, according to local media reports.

One victim died in the sinking of the M/B Jenny.

Philippine Red Cross posted pictures of two of the vessels on social media, showing one turned upside down as rescuers swam nearby, while the other was almost completely sunk with just the bow above water.

Video from ABS CBN TV network showed a rescuer carrying a child from a motorboat to an ambulance in an Iloilo pier, where frantic relatives waited.

ILOILO-GUIMARAS STRAIT TRAGEDY UPDATE

Iloilo City Disaster Risk and Reduction Management Office (CDRRMO) head Donna Magno confirmed that 11 are confirmed dead in the two separate incidents of capsizing of three pump boats in Iloilo-Guimaras strait on August 3, 2019. pic.twitter.com/c8ZKt2CiUN — Daily Guardian (@dailyguardianph) August 3, 2019

Forecasters have warned of heavy monsoon rains and thunderstorms amid a brewing storm about 875 kilometres off the country’s eastern coast.

Classes and work have been suspended in the Philippines’ capital, Manila, amid heavy rains and flooding, which caused heavy traffic jams on Friday in low-lying areas of the city.

About 20 typhoons and storms batter the Philippines each year, making the archipelago that lies on the Pacific typhoon and earthquake belt one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world.

The weather bureau said the disturbance was expected to strengthen into a tropical depression in the next 24 to 35 hours and bring more rains.