The National - News

HONG KONG ON HIGH ALERT AS HATO BRINGS CITY TO STANDSTILL

▶ City prepares for hurricane force winds by raising storm alert to its maximum, Typhoon 10 level

- Agence France-Presse

Hong Kong raised its highest storm warning yesterday as Severe Typhoon Hato brought the city to a standstill, shutting down the stock market and forcing the cancellati­on of hundreds of flights.

Its weather observator­y raised the storm warning to the city’s maximum Typhoon 10 signal, meaning hurricane force winds were expected.

It was the first such alert in five years and only the third time the Typhoon 10 warning has been issued since 1997, when the former British colony was handed over to China.

By 11am, Hato was just 60 kilometres south-west of Hong Kong, sending metres-high waves crashing into shorelines with flooding in some areas already knee deep.

Gusts of up to 168kph brought flying debris, tore down trees and scaffoldin­g and broke constructi­on cranes.

Shop and home owners taped up their windows to protect them from shattering.

“I was on my balcony in the village of Yuen Long when a tree literally flew past my house,” said Dave Coulson, from the rural north-western New Territorie­s, who said he was having frequent power cuts.

The usually packed streets of Hong Kong island were eerily empty, aside from a few who tried to battle through the winds.

“My five-year old daughter’s first day at school was cancelled,” said one woman as she braved the weather to walk her dog through the neighbourh­ood of Tai Hang.

“I normally go up the hill to walk him but I did not today because of the trees.”

Some people ventured out with cameras to snap and video the storm.

One Lohas Park resident had brought his young daughter down to experience the weather. “I came down here to feel the winds,” he said.

The government said two men had been injured so far. About 200 people have sought refuge in temporary shelters.

The typhoon is expected to edge towards the Pearl River Estuary and to make landfall about 100km to the west of Hong Kong in the afternoon.

The territory’s flagship airline, Cathay Pacific, said almost all its flights leaving before 5pm yesterday would be cancelled, with Hong Kong Airlines following suit.

Hong Kong airport authoritie­s said 420 flights had already been cancelled by daybreak.

Ferries were suspended as was the city’s airport express train line, while the metro rail and buses operated only a limited service.

Hong Kong is regularly besieged by typhoons between July and October, but direct hits on the city are rare.

The city suffered its strongest storm in 1962, when the eye of Typhoon Wanda passed over and gusts of 284kph were recorded.

It killed 130 people and destroyed thousands of residentia­l dwellings, leaving 72,000 people homeless.

Since then, Hong Kong has adapted to typhoons, including making sure its highest commercial skyscraper­s can sway in the wind.

The extensive lockdown procedures mean the storms rarely cause deaths.

The last time the Typhoon 10 signal was raised in Hong Kong was for Typhoon Vicente in 2012.

 ?? Reuters ?? Umbrellas offered little protection when Typhoon Hato hit Hong Kong
Reuters Umbrellas offered little protection when Typhoon Hato hit Hong Kong
 ?? AFP ?? A cyclist rides against strong winds brought by the typhoon in Zhuhai in China’s southern Guangdong province
AFP A cyclist rides against strong winds brought by the typhoon in Zhuhai in China’s southern Guangdong province

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