The Jerusalem Post

Vietnam braces for typhoon after Philippine­s hit

Thousands leave southern areas, Ho Chi Minh City closes schools

- • By MI NGUYEN and MANUEL MOGATO

Authoritie­s in Vietnam on Monday prepared to move a million people from low-lying areas along the south coast as a typhoon approached, after battering the Philippine­s with floods and landslides that killed more than 230 people.

Typhoon Tembin is expected to slam into Vietnam late on Monday, after bringing misery to the predominan­tly Christian Philippine­s just before Christmas.

Vietnam’s disaster prevention committee said 74,000 people had been moved to safety from vulnerable areas, while authoritie­s in 15 provinces and cities were prepared to move more than one million.

The government ordered that oil rigs and vessels be protected and it warned that about 62,000 fishing boats should not venture out to sea.

“Vietnam must ensure the safety of its oil rigs and vessels. If necessary, close the oil rigs and evacuate workers,” Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc was quoted as saying on a government website.

Schools were ordered to close in the southern commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City on Monday, a working day in Vietnam.

On Sunday, Tembin hit the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, parts of which are contested by several countries, including Vietnam and China.

No casualties were reported in outposts there.

Vietnam, like the Philippine­s, is regularly battered by typhoons that form over the warm waters of the Pacific and barrel westwards into land.

Tembin will be the 16th major storm to hit Vietnam this year. The storms and other disasters have left 390 people dead or missing, according to official figures.

In the Philippine­s, rescue workers were still struggling to reach some remote areas hit by floods and landslides that Tembin’s downpours brought. Scores of people remained missing as the death toll climbed to more than 230.

The full extent of the devastatio­n was only becoming clear as the most remote areas were being reached.

Health worker Arturo Simbajon said nearly the entire coastal village of Anungan on the Zamboanga Peninsula of Mindanao island had been wiped out by a barrage of broken logs, boulders and mud that swept down a river and out to sea.

“Only the mosque was left standing,” Simbajon said.

“People were watching the rising sea but did not expect the water to come from behind them.”

Manuel Luis Ochotorena, head of regional disaster agency, said he expected the death toll to rise.

“Many areas in Zamboanga Peninsula are still without power and communicat­ions, some towns are cut off due to collapsed bridges, floods and landslides,” he said.

Tens of thousands of people on Mindanao have been displaced by the storm, which struck late on Friday.

The Philippine­s is battered by about 20 typhoons a year and warnings are routinely issued.

But disaster officials said many villagers had ignored warnings to get out coastal areas and move away from riverbanks.

In 2013, super-typhoon Haiyan killed nearly 8,000 people and left 200,000 families homeless in the central Philippine­s.

 ?? (VNA/Manh Linh via Reuters) ?? VIETNAMESE RESIDENTS take shelter in an evacuation center before Tembin hits land in Ho Chi Minh City yesterday.
(VNA/Manh Linh via Reuters) VIETNAMESE RESIDENTS take shelter in an evacuation center before Tembin hits land in Ho Chi Minh City yesterday.

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