After flooding China, weaker Ragasa heads towards Vietnam
More than 2 million people were relocated across Guangdong ahead of Ragasa, which peaked at super-typhoon strength on Monday.
PTI
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By Thursday morning, Ragasa's sustained winds had weakened to a maximum 65 kph. (PTI)
Hong Kong, 25 Sept
A weakened tropical storm Ragasa pushed west along the
southern Chinese coast toward Vietnam on Thursday after flooding streets and
homes in the economic hub of Guangdong province and causing deaths in Taiwan
and the Philippines earlier in the week.
In the Guangdong city of Yangjiang, over 10,000 trees were
damaged and branches floated on the water in submerged streets. Crews used
excavators to clear toppled trees and clear blocked roads, Yangjiang Daily
reported.
Nearly half a million households suffered power outages.
More than a third of those homes remained without electricity Thursday morning,
the newspaper reported.
Streets in the city of Zhuhai turned into rivers and
rescuers used inflatable boats to rescue stranded residents. Water inundated
some first-floor homes in older neighbourhoods, Southern Metropolis Daily
reported.
Communication with people on some islands in Jiangmen city
were cut off, Southern Weekly newspaper said.
To the west in the Guangxi region, schools and businesses
were closed and tourism activities halted in some cities.
More than 2 million people were relocated across Guangdong
ahead of Ragasa, which peaked at super-typhoon strength Monday with maximum
sustained winds of 265 kph and the world's strongest cyclone of the year.
By Thursday morning, its sustained winds had weakened to a
maximum 65 kph, and Ragasa was forecast to dissipate eventually while remaining
a rain threat for Vietnam and other parts of Southeast Asia.
Vietnam Prime Minister Pham Minh Chính ordered government
ministries and local authorities to protect infrastructure like dams and
hospitals, secure fishing vessels and coastal assets, and ready evacuation and
search and rescue operations. Some flights were cancelled or rescheduled, and
workers trimmed trees to avoid wind hazards in the northern part of the
country.
For Hong Kong, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, activities halted
earlier in the week were gradually returning to normal.
Flights in Hong Kong resumed after some 1,000 had been
disrupted, affecting about 140,000 passengers. Businesses reopened Thursday.
But some big fallen branches remained scattered on the streets after more than
1,200 trees across the city were topped by the fierce winds. Some 100 injured
people were sent to the hospital.
In Taiwan, authorities on Thursday revised the death toll
from 17 to 14 due to repeated records. The victims were in eastern Hualien
County, where heavy rain caused a barrier lake to overflow, sending water
gushing into nearby Guangfu township. Muddy torrents destroyed a bridge,
turning the roads in the township into churning rivers that carried vehicles
and furniture away. Some people remained out of contact in Hualien, and dozens
were injured across the island.
In the Philippines, Ragasa left at least 11 dead, including
seven fishermen who drowned Monday when their boat overturned in northern
Cagayan province. Two fishermen remained missing Thursday.
Another tropical storm was approaching the Philippines from
the Pacific. The storm, which was named Opong in the country and Bualoi
elsewhere, was forecast to hit the east-central Philippines on Friday and could
still strengthen into a typhoon. It had sustained winds of up to 110 kph and
higher gusts, government forecasters said.
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