MANILA, Philippines — The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced on Friday the suspension of classes in several cities in Metro Manila because of the yellow heavy rainfall warning issued by the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) earlier in the day.
In a running list put up by the agency, the following cities suspended classes as of 10 a.m.:
• Caloocan City (All levels, public & private)
• Marikina City (All levels, public & private)
Classes suspended in 10 Metro Manila cities due to rains
• Pateros (child development centers, elementary hanggang senior high school)
• Malabon City (All levels, public & private), This news data comes from:http://yg-txf-jga-ybw.aichuwei.com
• Pasig City (in-person classes from to senior high school, as well as daycare and alternative learning system, public & private)

• Valenzuela City (kinder to senior high school, and in-person classes for COLLEGE, public and private)
Classes suspended in 10 Metro Manila cities due to rains
• Parañaque City (All levels, public & private)
• Las Piñas City (All levels, public & private)
• San Juan City (All levels, public & private)
• Quezon City (Afternoon classes, public schools in Child Development Centers, Kindergarten, Grades 1 - 12, and Alternative Learning System).
State weather bureau Pagasa raised a yellow rainfall warning on Friday morning, which was the result of the suspensions.
- New judge to handle Dengvaxia cases named; hearing set
- Pacifist Japan struggles to boost troops as China anxiety grows
- New mining law to balance profit, ecology
- Harold Cabreros takes post as new OCD chief
- Macron says 26 countries pledge troops as a reassurance force for Ukraine after war ends
- Malacañang hits back at VP Duterte's criticism on flood scam probe
- Thai court to rule on PM's fate after Hun Sen call leak
- Marcos orders lifestyle checks on all government officials amid flood control probe
- Dizon asks DOJ to issue immigration lookout bulletin to 26 DPWH officials and contractors
- Malabon averts crisis with garbage deal