Bangkok Post

Typhoon Chan-hom looms off coast as 1 million flee

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SHANGHAI: Typhoon Chan-hom paralysed transport links and devastated farmland on China’s eastern coast near Shanghai on yesterday, after nearly a million people fled the approachin­g storm, the government and state media said.

No casualties have been reported so far, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

China’s National Meteorolog­ical Centre (NMC) said the typhoon could make landfall yesterday in Zhejiang province near the port of Ningbo, home to almost six million people.

The severe typhoon could be the strongest to hit Zhejiang in any July since 1949, it previously said.

But Hu Yaowen, deputy head of Zhejiang’s flood control and drought prevention headquarte­rs, said it might narrowly pass by the province and veer north, Xinhua reported.

At 3pm yesterday, the storm was around 50km from the Zhejiang coast and was packing winds of up to 162kph, said the NMC, which maintained its highest red alert for the typhoon despite downgradin­g it from “super” to “strong”.

Zhejiang has evacuated around 960,000 people and called its entire fishing fleet back to port, state media said. Provincial authoritie­s said earlier that nearly 30,000 vessels had moored safely.

Typhoon winds blew down trees and street signs across Zhejiang and knocked down an unoccupied building in the city of Cixi, provincial television reported.

In Zhejiang’s Sanmen county, local television showed dozens of melons floating in a flooded field, as a farmer lamented his lost harvest. “There might be no crop this year,” he said.

Some parts of Zhejiang were deluged with more than 30cm of rain in the 24 hours before Saturday morning, the local government said. In Taizhou city, rain triggered a landslide which briefly blocked a road.

More than 600 flights at four airports in Zhejiang were cancelled, Xinhua said.

In Shanghai, the city government maintained its second most serious typhoon alert, urging people to stay home and cancelling several public events as rain picked up towards midday.

“We recommend everyone does their best to use ‘squatting at home’ tactics to welcome the typhoon,” the Shanghai government said in a posting on its official microblog.

More than 400 flights at the city’s two airports were cancelled, along with 330 long-distance bus journeys and several trains, according to reports.

Traffic thinned in Shanghai, though enterprisi­ng taxi drivers still cruised the streets looking for fares despite the storm, which blew branches off trees.

Chan-hom is forecast to affect a wide swathe of China, also bringing heavy rain to the eastern provinces of Fujian and Jiangsu, the NMC said. Fujian, south of Zhejiang, has evacuated more than 30,000 people and Jiangsu another 10,000.

The typhoon is the second storm to hit China in days after severe tropical storm Linfa made landfall on the coast of Guangdong province further south.

The US government’s Joint Typhoon Warning Centre forecast that after hitting China, Chan-hom would head towards the Korean peninsula, bringing “gale-force” winds to the west coast of South Korea.

The storm left five people dead in the Philippine­s earlier in the week and injured more than 20 people in Japan on Friday as strong winds uprooted trees and battered buildings, the Tokyo Broadcasti­ng System broadcaste­r reported.

 ??  ?? FROM SEA TO RAGING SEA: A huge wave breaks over a vehicle at the shore ahead of the landfall of Typhoon Chan-Hom in Wenling in eastern China’s Zhejiang province on Friday.
FROM SEA TO RAGING SEA: A huge wave breaks over a vehicle at the shore ahead of the landfall of Typhoon Chan-Hom in Wenling in eastern China’s Zhejiang province on Friday.

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