Typhoon kills 25 in China, flight chaos in Hong kong

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Typhoon kills 25 in China, flight chaos in Hong kong

AFP Updated September 23, 2013, 5:51 pm

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HONG KONG (AFP) - Typhoon Usagi killed at least 25 people after crashing ashore in southern China, throwing the region's transport systems into chaos and leaving tens of thousands of airline passengers stranded in Hong Kong on Monday.

Schools and businesses were shut as activity in the normally teeming financial hub slowed to a crawl after Usagi -- the world's most powerful storm this year -- battered a long swathe of coastline with torrential rain and winds of up to 165 kilometres (103 miles) per hour during the night.

The deaths were reported by Chinese state media after Usagi made landfall near Shanwei city in Guangdong province northeast of Hong Kong on Sunday evening, prompting the highest-level alert from the National Meteorological Center.

The reports by Xinhua news agency did not say how the 25 were killed but said all the deaths were in Guangdong after the typhoon brought down trees and damaged roads. Dozens more were injured in accidents, it added.

Bullet trains from Guangzhou city to Beijing were suspended and Xinhua said winds were strong enough near Shanwei to blow cars off the road. More than 47,000 fishing boats were in harbour and schools were closed in 14 coastal cities.

Usagi had previously killed two people in the Philippines and unleashed landslides and power outages across southern Taiwan at the weekend as it ploughed through the Luzon Strait with ferocious winds and heavy downpours.

Monsoon rains worsened by Usagi brought flooding on Monday to the Philippine capital Manila and nearby provinces.

As the typhoon bore down on Hong Kong, operators shut down one of the world's busiest sea ports and nearly 450 flights were either cancelled or delayed on Sunday as Cathay Pacific and other airlines imposed preemptive suspensions.

On its approach Hong Kong's Observatory had said it was the strongest typhoon to affect the city since 1979, although it lost power as it approached the coast. Tens of thousands of people had their travel plans upended with ferries and trains also disrupted, while Cathay resumed flights only from noon (0400 GMT) on Monday.

Many passengers were forced to stay overnight at the airport, sleeping on the floor or spending the night playing card games. Many milled around the departure hall hoping to rebook their flights.

But handwritten signs warned them that there was little chance of getting standby seats on flights out Monday and to check back later.

"We've waited for so long... and we still can't leave. Who would not be unhappy?" Iris Ouyang, an irate 26-year-old marketing officer from Beijing told AFP, after waiting more than 12 hours for her China Southern flight.

"Before we had good feelings towards Hong Kong, but not anymore."

Airlines scrambled to clear the backlog of passengers by regrouping passengers and arranging extra flights as more than 1,000 passengers waited in the check-in area.

But airport authorities foresaw a second day of flight disruptions, with more than 480 scheduled flights being cancelled or delayed on Monday.

Officials in Hong Kong, which is well versed in typhoon preparations, said 13 people were injured during the storm, while more than 60 trees had fallen.

Major thoroughfares were empty and signboards swayed in the wind early Monday, but some residents ignored official warnings and headed out to the coast to brave the wind.

"I heard the typhoon was strong so I wanted to feel it," one woman told Cable TV.

The city's stock market opened at 1pm on Monday after all storm warning signals were lowered in the city.

On its way towards southern China, Usagi had forced the evacuation of 3,400 people in southern Taiwan.

Twelve people were injured in Kinmen, a Taiwan-controlled island off China's Fujian province, after they were hit by falling trees.

Prior to hitting Taiwan, Usagi brushed the far north of the Philippines where a man and a woman drowned on Friday when their boat capsized in high seas. Another three people remain missing.

"Local disaster officials told us this was the strongest typhoon they had experienced in years," regional civil defence officer Ronald Villa told AFP on Sunday.

 

Usagi kills 52 in China, Philippines
AAP September 23, 2013, 11:09 pm

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At least 25 have people died in China and 27 in the Philippines after Typhoon Usagi swept over the South China Sea and caused floods in southern China's Guangdong province, reports say.

Residents of Guangdong's worst-hit city, Shanwei, said the typhoon, which hit land in China late on Sunday, was the strongest for 30 years.

At least 13 people died in Shanwei, while 12 died in three other areas of Guangdong, some 310,000 were evacuated and several thousand homes were destroyed, authorities said on Monday.

"The toll in our city included seven deaths at a railway construction site," state media quoted Xiao Zhan, deputy head of the Shanwei Water Authority, as saying.

"The majority of casualties were due to the collapse of houses where people took shelter," Xiao said.

In nearby Shantou city, a local resident told dpa by telephone that seawater pushed by the typhoon had flooded the streets.

"This time it is quite serious," said the resident, who asked to be identified by the single name Jack.

"The road in front of my apartment is flooded by about 20-30 centimetres of seawater, and I heard that the houses of people living closer to the sea were flooded up to about chest height," he said.

School classes and all air, rail and shipping services were suspended on Monday in 14 cities in Guangdong, as well as the nearby Chinese territories of Hong Kong and Macao, the agency said.

In the Philippines, 27 people died as heavy rain battered the main island of Luzon, officials said.

City officials in Olongapo, 80 kilometres north-west of Manila, said the US embassy had agreed to their request for help by a nearby US Navy ship, as many residents had taken refuge on their roofs.

Usagi killed three people in Vietnam last week, but the storm was predicted to start weakening from Tuesday.

 
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