Daily Dispatch

Second storm hits Hong Kong, Macau

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APOWERFUL storm lashed Hong Kong and Macau yesterday, just days after a punishing typhoon swept through the region and claimed at least 18 lives.

Both cities raised a Typhoon 8 signal – the third-highest warning level – early yesterday as severe tropical storm “Pakhar” made landfall in the region, where emergency workers were still battling to repair Wednesday’s damage.

A total of 206 flights were cancelled and another 471 delayed because of the latest storm, while 44 flights had to divert, Hong Kong’s Airport Authority said.

All ferry services in Hong Kong were suspended until the storm warning was lowered in both cities in the early afternoon. A total of 236 trees weakened by Wednesday’s typhoon were brought down by the latest storm in Hong Kong and there were 16 flooding reports.

No deaths were reported yesterday but Hong Kong hospital officials said 62 people were injured. In Macau, eight people were slightly hurt, a government spokespers­on said. A Chinese cargo ship was sinking east of Hong Kong yesterday morning but all 11 crew members were rescued.

Pakhar brought winds of up to 130km/h to Hong Kong. Yesterday was a holiday but on a working day the Typhoon 8 signal would have meant the shutdown of the stock market, schools and businesses.

In Macau, authoritie­s issued fresh flooding warnings as shops that were battered on Wednesday by Typhoon Hato, remained closed yesterday morning. Traffic lights stayed blacked out with power yet to return to parts of the city.

The water supply has been restored, a Macau government statement said yesterday, but buildings with damaged pumps still lack water.

“This is tough but there is nothing we can do,” said shopowner Leung Chin-pang, who has been without water since Hato hit.

Pakhar – named after a freshwater fish in the lower Mekong river – arrived as worst-hit Macau was still picking up the pieces following Hato, the city’s strongest typhoon in 53 years.

Hato, which triggered the most severe Typhoon 10 warning, ripped through the gambling hub on Wednesday, plunging casinos into darkness and causing destructiv­e floods.

The official death toll in Macau reached 10, as the government of the semi-autonomous Chinese city faced recriminat­ions over its lack of preparedne­ss.

A further eight people are known to have died from Typhoon Hato in the neighbouri­ng mainland Chinese province of Guangdong, which Pakhar also reached mid-morning yesterday.

Dozens of visitors had returned to the main tourist attraction of Senado Square in Macau yesterday as the clean-up progressed.

Residents of all ages and about 1 000 troops from the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Macau garrison worked to clear piles of debris blocking the streets.

Four Hong Kong journalist­s covering the impact of the typhoon were barred entry into Macau on Saturday on the grounds that they “threatened the stability of internal security”, according to the Hong Kong Journalist­s Associatio­n. — AFP

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