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3 dead, 40 missing after typhoon hits south
GUANGZHOU—Three people have
been confirmed to have died from the mudflows and strong winds of
Typhoon Neoguri in Guangdong province, while rescue workers are still
searching for 40 fishermen, including 22 Vietnamese.
The provincial flood-control headquarters said on Sunday that Neoguri
killed two people in Shenzhen - a woman older than 80 and an 11-year-old
girl - when a mudflow inundated a road under construction. One person in
Zhuhai was struck and killed by an aluminum sheet that strong gales blew
off a stadium roof.
Neoguri hit south China with heavy rains and strong winds starting from
Friday.
It first landed in Wenchang city in the island province of Hainan at
10:30 pm on Friday. More than 1.3 million people in Hainan were
affected; more than 213,000 of them were evacuated; and more than 550
houses collapsed. Provincial authorities estimated direct economic
losses at 337 million yuan ($48 million) by 11 am on Saturday.
Neoguri weakened to become a tropical storm after landing again in
Yangjiang city, Guangdong at 2:30 pm on Saturday. The Guangdong
headquarters received reports of damage in the cities of Yangjiang,
Jiangmen, Zhuhai and Shenzhen.
In Yangjiang, 274,000 people were affected and 7,000 hectares of
farmland were inundated. Losses from the suspension of industrial
production, and damage to embankments and telecommunications facilities
were estimated at 96 million yuan. According to the provincial
observatory, the storm dissipated at 5 am yesterday in Shanwei.
The Ministry of Communications’ rescue teams saved more than 100
fishermen on Saturday and sent helicopters to rescue another 40
yesterday.
The Vietnamese embassy in Beijing requested China provide emergency
assistance to 22 onboard a fishing ship.
The ministry’s rescue ship found the capsized vessel yesterday morning
and dispatched a rescue helicopter to search for survivors. Neoguri
arrived in China earlier in the year than any typhoon since 1949.
The first typhoon of a year usually comes around June 29, a date
determined by averaging the meteorological records of many years. The
China Meteorological Administration had predicted more typhoons would
hit China this year.
The National Meteorological Center’s chief forecaster Qiao Lin said
Neoguri’s early appearance was caused by the La Nina effect, which cools
the Pacific Ocean’s surface waters near South America, causing increased
rainfall in southern China.
The effect also caused the snowstorms that hit southern China in January
and February, killing 107 people and causing 11 billion yuan in economic
losses.—Xinhua |