China Daily

580,000 evacuated, as typhoon hits land

- By HOU LIQIANG in Beijing and HUANG ZHILING in Chengdu Contact the writers at houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

A total of 580,000 people have been evacuated as typhoon Maria stormed into southeaste­rn China on Wednesday, paralyzing railway and air transporta­tion in some areas, authoritie­s said.

The typhoon, the eighth in China this year, made landfall about 9 am on Wednesday in Lianjiang county, Fujian province, bringing gales of up to 151 kilometers per hour at its center. All those evacuated are from Fujian and neighborin­g Zhejiang province, according to the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarte­rs.

Maria is the first typhoon this year to trigger a red alert from the National Meteorolog­ical Center, the highest in China's four-tier system for severe weather.

As of 4 pm, the typhoon caused a direct economic loss of at least 490 million yuan ($73.4 million).

The strong gales uprooted many trees, broke fishing boats and caused hazards on roads in Lianjiang, a fishing county. Chen Zuliang, a member of the county's flood control office, said that more than 8,000 residents had been evacuated in the county.

Fujian ordered all fishing boats to return to harbor by noon on Tuesday and workers at offshore fish farms were required to return to land by 6 pm.

The headquarte­rs also said the typhoon brought torrential rains in the two provinces, with precipitat­ion of up to 238 millimeter­s from 2 am to 1 pm. The sea level in Shacheng monitoring station in Fujian at 7:20 am on Wednesday reached 4.4 meters, the highest on record since 1956. The speed of the gale at the typhoon’s center decreased to 83 k/h by 1 pm, the headquarte­rs said.

Hundreds of trains from or going to Fujian were halted, and 178 flights have been canceled at Fuzhou Changle Internatio­nal Airport, according to transporta­tion authoritie­s.

Fujian fire authoritie­s entered “combat readiness” mode at 8 am on Tuesday. While establishi­ng 144 sixmember rescue teams, it has also mobilized abundant rescue equipment and disasterre­lief materials, including boats and life vests, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management.

The ministry also said more than 5,800 technician­s with expertise in geological disaster control have been in positions to deal with resulting problems.

The typhoon was expected to enter Jiangxi province on Wednesday night as it weakened into a tropical depression.

Sichuan province was also troubled by torrential rains on Wednesday that resulted in causalitie­s.

Three people from one family in Nianzi village in Qingchuan county, Sichuan, were found dead from a rain-induced landslide on Wednesday morning, according to Wang Wei, an informatio­n officer from the Qingchuan county government.

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