The Borneo Post

Hong Kong, southern China clean up after super typhoon, 4 dead in Guangdong

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SHANGHAI: The financial hub of Hong Kong began clearing up yesterday after being battered by one of the strongest typhoons in recent years, with financial markets and offices operating as normal.

Super typhoon Mangkhut, with hurricane-force winds well over 200 kilometres per hour, had barrelled past the northern tip of the Philippine­s, killing at least 50 people. It then skirted south of Hong Kong and the neighbouri­ng gambling hub of Macau, before making landfall in China.

Parts of Hong Kong and Macau were severely flooded, though there were no immediate reports of fatalities.

China Central Television, the state broadcaste­r, said four people had been killed in Guangdong, China’s most populous province of over 100 million residents.

The state broadcaste­r also said flood warnings had been issued for 38 rivers in the neighbouri­ng region of Guangxi, while 12 coastal monitoring stations reported their biggest- ever waves. It also said more than 13,300 hectares of farmland had been damaged.

As many as 2.45 million people in Guangdong province had been relocated on Sunday night, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion said the typhoon, dubbed ‘ King of Storms’, swept west to Guangxi province at 6 am and weakened to a ‘tropical storm’.

It forecast the storm to hit the regions of Guizhou, Chongqing and Yunnan on Monday.

The meteorolog­ical administra­tion said Mangkhut was one of the 10 biggest storms to hit southeast China since 1949 -- when records began -- with wind speeds at around 162 km/h.

Across Hong Kong, authoritie­s strived to clear roads of debris, including toppled trees and bamboo scaffoldin­g.

Some buildings, including the One Harbourfro­nt office tower, had many windows smashed after a day in which some of the city’s skyscraper­s had swayed with the ferocious gusts.

“Yesterday’s storm was very strong. Even for a person of my weight, I was about to be blown down by the wind which made me very scared,” said a 70-year- old resident surnamed Fung. “It was very serious this time.” Stock and financial markets opened as normal on Monday in Hong Kong and the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen.

Some transport services remained suspended, though flights in the region were slowly resuming after a shutdown on Sunday, stranding many thousands of passengers.

In Macau, badly hit by a super typhoon last year, authoritie­s were much more prepared this time, ordering casinos to close late on Saturday night as the storm approached. Casinos were operationa­l again early on Monday though authoritie­s were still struggling to restore power to some of the 20,000 households that suffered power cuts.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Damaged windows of the One Harbourfro­nt office tower are seen following Typhoon Mangkhut, in Hong Kong.
— Reuters photo Damaged windows of the One Harbourfro­nt office tower are seen following Typhoon Mangkhut, in Hong Kong.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? An employee walks through a flooded shopping mall in Heng Fa Chuen district during Super Typhoon Mangkhut in Hong Kong.
— AFP photo An employee walks through a flooded shopping mall in Heng Fa Chuen district during Super Typhoon Mangkhut in Hong Kong.

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