Over half of Manila has been swamped by floods as high as three metres
China
evacuates 450,000 after Philippines turned into 'waterworld' by
Typhoon Haikui
Shanghai
and the nearby coastal province Zhejiang have evacuated 456,000
people as China prepares for its third typhoon in less than a week
7
August, 2012
The
emergency measures were taken after Typhoon Haikui turned Manila, the
Philippines capital into "waterworld", killing 50 people.
The
typhoon is expected to make landfall in Zhejiang province, just south
of Shanghai, late Tuesday or early Wednesday, the China
Meteorological Administration said.
Shanghai
officials fear the storm could be the worst since 2005, when Typhoon
Matsa killed seven people in the city, state media said.
The
city aimed to move 200,000 people to more than a hundred shelters by
Tuesday evening, government officials were quoted as saying.
The
Shanghai government ordered outdoor construction sites shut down and
cancelled summer classes for children until the typhoon had eased.
Authorities
in Zhejiang were also rushing to get people out the path of the
storm, with 256,000 residents of the province evacuated so far, state
media said.
More
than 30,000 ships had rushed to shelter in ports.
The
typhoon was packing winds of up to 151 kilometres per hour and could
bring up to 400 millimetres (16 inches) of rain to some areas, it
said. The eastern provinces of Jiangsu and Anhui would also be
affected. China is still recovering from Typhoons Damrey and Saola,
which hit over the weekend. Those storms brought heavy rains that
killed 23 and left nine missing.
Xinhua
said the heavy rains that came with the typhoons triggered mudslides
and flooding, affecting hundreds of thousands of people.
Typhoon
Haikui's torrential rains submerged much of the Philippine capital
and surrounding areas on Tuesday, forcing nearly 270,000 people to
flee their homes with more flooding expected in the north of the
country as a tropical storm passes through the region, officials
said.
Steady
rains for the past 10 days, killing more than 50 people, are set to
continue until Wednesday, the Philippines weather bureau said.
"It's
like Waterworld," said Benito Ramos, head of the Philippines
national disaster agency, referring to a Hollywood movie about a
flooded world.
Schools
, financial markets, and public and private offices were ordered
shut, including outsourcing firms whose corporate clients are mainly
from the United States and Europe.
Disaster
officials said over half of Manila was swamped by floods as high as
three metres, worsened by a high tide and the release of water from
dams in surrounding provinces.
President
Benigno Aquino, in an emergency meeting briefly interrupted by a
power failure at the main army base in Manila, ordered officials to
exert maximum effort to aid residents in flooded areas. Officials
have deployed army troops, police and emergency workers with rubber
boats and amphibious trucks.
The
monsoon rains, which dumped about 300 mm (12 inches) or three times
the daily average of 80-100 mm from late Monday to Tuesday, were the
heaviest in three years, the weather bureau said.
Most
major roads in Manila were inundated by knee- to waist-deep
floodwaters. Some flights were delayed or cancelled. Power, water and
communications in flooded areas were disrupted.
Some
of the affected residents were marooned on the roofs of their houses.
"There
are about 5,000 people here," said Ester Ronabio, a public
school teacher and volunteer in one of the temporary shelter areas in
low-lying Marikina City in the eastern part of Manila. "We can't
control the flow of people."
In
a sign of the difficult scramble to move people to safety, Aquino
appealed to an anti-graft court to release dozens of rubber boats
held as evidence in a case against senior police officials for use in
evacuation efforts.
Residents
of Manila expressed concern the rains were a repeat of Typhoon
Ketsana which killed more than 700 people and destroyed $1 billion
worth of private and public property.
"The
floods are so deep where we live, we don't want a repeat of Typhoon
Ketsana a few years ago," Melanio David, a father of four, told
Reuters. "We got scared so we evacuated last night."
China
braces for record third typhoon in a week
China
is facing its third typhoon in a single week, as Haikui strengthened
from a tropical storm on Sunday into a typhoon on Monday afternoon.
7
August, 2012
"Within
seven days our nation may be hit successively by three typhoons, the
first time such circumstances have arisen since records have been
taken," Minister of Water Resources Chen Lei said in a
statement.
"We
are still dealing with the impact of Typhoons Saola and Damrey and
now Typhoon Haikui is heading towards us,” he said.
At
least 14 people are confirmed dead and five others are missing after
typhoons Damrey and Saola blasted across China’s eastern coast over
the weekend, authorities said Monday.
Now
Typhoon Haikui is approaching East China’s Zhejiang province,
heading for a stretch of coastline just south of the 23 million
people living in Shanghai, the world’s largest city.
On
Tuesday morning the center of Typhoon Haikui was located in the East
China Sea, about 330 kilometers southeast of Shanghai.
Haikui
is forecast to move west by north to northwest at a speed of 10-15
kilometers per hour, gaining intensity, and make landfall in the
low-lying coastal area between Zhoushan and Yuhuan on Tuesday night
or Wednesday morning, according to the China Meteorological
Administration, CMA.
CMA
Administrator Zheng Guoguang signed an order Tuesday morning to
upgrade the emergency response level for Typhoon Haikui from Level
III to Level II.
The
heavy rains of Typhoon Haikui are forecast to hit Shanghai and
Zhejiang, Anhui, Fujian, and Jiangsu provinces over next three days,
the CMA warns.
Wind
speed may reach 108 to 119 kilometers per hour (67 to 74 miles per
hour) as the center of the storm moves across the coast.
Shanghai
is expected to be pummeled by Haikui’s rains from Tuesday to
Thursday, with heavy rain in some areas, said Yao Jianqun, deputy
director of the Shanghai Central Meteorological Station.
The
Shanghai Railway Bureau has decided to suspend the sale of train
tickets of the Ningbo-Taizhou-Wenzhou Railway along the southeast
coast on Wednesday in order to ensure the safety of passengers.
Frequent
typhoons have lashed the country since mid-July said Chen, but with
Typhoon Haikui the record is being broken.
“It
is the first time that the country will have been hit by three
typhoons one-after-another within seven days,” said the minister,
who is also deputy commander-in-chief of the State Flood Control and
Drought Relief Headquarters.
The
country’s flood control capacity is being challenged by the
frequent fierce storms.
More
than 1.24 million people were evacuated from areas in seven provinces
and five people were missing after Typhoons Saola and Damrey battered
the coastline from Thursday, according to China’s state news
agency, Xinhua.
Typhoon
Damrey made landfall near Xiangshui county in east China’s Jiangsu
Province on August 2. In the northeastern province of Liaoning,
nearly 1.46 million people were deluged by heavy rains and floods.
More than 10,000 houses collapsed and about 17,000 houses were
damaged, forcing 138,000 people to evacuate.
In
neighboring Hebei province, about 2.33 million people were affected
by Damrey; 9,400 houses were destroyed by flooding.
Damrey
was the strongest tropical cyclone to affect the area north of the
Yangtze River since 1949. […]
China’s
weather forecasters say new tropical cyclones are forming that will
continue to challenge the country’s flood control capacity over the
next several days.
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