The Borneo Post

Typhoon tears into Vietnam killing 21

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QUANG NAM, Vietnam: Twentyone people have been killed and dozens more were feared dead yesterday a er a typhoon tore through central Vietnam, triggering landslides and causing some of the worst destructio­n seen in years.

Typhoon Molave hit villages as it made landfall a day earlier, tearing roofs from homes and bringing heavy rain to an area already badly affected by weeks of flooding.

Hundreds of rescuers were desperatel­y trying to reach survivors a er several landslides, but many were hampered by thick mud and fallen trees.

“My two daughters were pulled out from the mud by neighbours,” Ho Thi Ha told AFP as one of her girls, four-year-old My, screamed in pain from an injured leg.

“But my father is dead and now I have nothing. Everything is buried in the mud,” the 28-yearold said.

Nineteen bodies had so far been pulled from the mud across three hard-hit villages in Quang Nam province, state media reported. Authoritie­s said another 45 people were believed to be buried in the area.

Soldiers were among a search team using heavy bulldozers and excavators to be er access two of the villages.

Two people were killed earlier as they tried to protect their homes from the typhoon, Vietnam’s fourth storm this month.

Authoritie­s relocated around 375,000 people to safety, cancelled hundreds of flights and closed schools and beaches.

It made landfall south of Danang packing winds of up to 145 kilometres per hour, before weakening to a tropical depression yestersday.

Nearly 90,000 homes had their roofs blown off and many were destroyed in the storm, according to the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).

Twenty-six fishermen were also still missing yesterday, with helicopter­s and navy ships deployed to look for their two vessels that disappeare­d before the storm made landfall.

The typhoon, which also killed 16 people and destroyed homes in the Philippine­s, came on the back of weeks of flooding and landslides that claimed 130 lives.

“We are heartbroke­n by more tragic loss of life as this typhoon has brought further misery and hardships to hundreds of thousands of people in central Vietnam,” said Vietnam Red Cross Society president Nguyen Thi Xuan Thu.

More than 700 communitie­s were without power, while infrastruc­ture, crops and safe drinking water supplies had been damaged or destroyed, the Red Cross added.

Hoang Phuong Thao, executive director of ActionAid Vietnam, said the typhoon had brought more death and destructio­n to communitie­s already “torn apart by the worst flooding we’ve seen in decades”.

Vietnam is prone to natural disasters in the rainy season between June and November, with central coastal provinces commonly impacted, but the storms have noticeably worsened in recent years.

The Red Cross said the storms were ‘yet another example of the devastatin­g impact of climate change’.

My two daughters were pulled out from the mud by neighbours. But my father is dead and now I have nothing. Everything is buried in the mud. Ho Thi Ha

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? Military personnel carry an injured woman onto a stretcher a er she was rescued from a landslide in Tra Leng commune in central Vietnam’s Quang Nam province.
— AFP photos Military personnel carry an injured woman onto a stretcher a er she was rescued from a landslide in Tra Leng commune in central Vietnam’s Quang Nam province.
 ??  ?? Women walk past uprooted trees in central Vietnam’s Quang Ngai province in the a ermath of Typhoon Molave.
Women walk past uprooted trees in central Vietnam’s Quang Ngai province in the a ermath of Typhoon Molave.

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