China Daily (Hong Kong)

Typhoon weakens to tropical storm, but heavy rains persist

- By ZHOU HUIYING in Harbin and LIU MINGTAI in Changchun Contact the writers at zhouhuiyin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Typhoon Haishen — the 10th typhoon of the year — that landed on the southern coast of South Korea on Monday morning, has weakened to become a tropical storm, but the gales and torrential rains it brought hit vast northeaste­rn China, triggering school suspension­s on Tuesday.

It will continue to weaken as it moves northwest with lesser influence on the northeaste­rn region, the National Meteorolog­ical Center said on Tuesday, adding that the areas will still witness gales and torrential rains until Thursday.

The NMC warned local authoritie­s to strengthen preparatio­ns to reduce losses, considerin­g that two typhoons had hit the regions days before.

The education bureau of Changchun, capital of Jilin province, requested all primary and secondary schools and kindergart­ens in the city to suspend classes on Tuesday due to the typhoon, and nearby cities like Jilin and Yanbian issued similar notices to suspend classes.

The city of Hunchun in the Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture upgraded its emergency response for floods and typhoons to Level II, the second-highest in the country’s four-tier emergency response system, and relocated 1,499 residents on Monday.

The Heilongjia­ng Provincial Department of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs issued guidelines on Monday evening, including various concrete measures to ensure the safety of agricultur­al production.

For example, the document said agricultur­al experts should be organized to scientific­ally assess the impact of disasters and implement production recovery measures depending on local conditions.

Jilin province is also facing the high risk of flooding and mountain torrents, as soil has already been saturated due to the heavy rain brought by previous typhoons, Han Mu’en, head of the provincial water resource department, said at a news conference on Sunday.

Compared with other provinces in eastern and southern China, typhoons are less common in Northeast China.

However, the series of three typhoons — Bavi, Maysak and Haishen — brought heavy rain and strong wind to the region within half a month.

Meteorolog­ical experts explained it was mainly the subtropica­l high pressure that caused the three typhoons to move northward.

“Heavy rain and strong wind brought by Typhoon Maysak struck Jilin around Sept 3, knocking over crops and flooding fields,” said Zhang Yonglin, deputy head of the provincial department of agricultur­e and rural affairs.

“Around 577,000 hectares of fields were affected, 90 percent of which are planted with corn.”

 ?? WANG QIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Strong winds ruin the umbrella of a resident in Changchun, Jilin province, on Tuesday. Typhoon Haishen brought strong winds and rains to many areas in Jilin. Right: Workers clear branches in a street brought down by winds in Changchun.
WANG QIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Left: Strong winds ruin the umbrella of a resident in Changchun, Jilin province, on Tuesday. Typhoon Haishen brought strong winds and rains to many areas in Jilin. Right: Workers clear branches in a street brought down by winds in Changchun.

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