From China and the Korean pensinsula...
Typhoon
Bolaven causes damage in northeast China
KSDK,
29
August, 2012
Gales
and downpours brought by Typhoon Bolaven swept through northeast
China's Jilin Province since Tuesday, flooding downtown areas and
damaging farmlands.
The
tropical storm affected Changchun, the provincial capital, with
rainfall exceeding 10 centimeters from 8 a.m. Tuesday to 8 a.m.
Wednesday. The maximum precipitation reached 120.6 millimeters.
In
the city, many trees were uprooted as 25 road sections were flooded.
Meanwhile, more than 20 power lines were damaged in the heavy rain.
The
local transport, civil administration, power and sanitation
departments dispatched workers Wednesday morning to clear roads and
repair damaged power lines.
The
preliminary data showed that the typhoon flattened 20 percent of corn
lands, which may have contributed to regional crop failure.
The
estimation of the total loss is currently underway.
2nd
Typhoon Threatens Battered Korean Peninsula
The
Korean Peninsula cleaned up Wednesday after one powerful typhoon and
girded itself for another that could be particularly damaging to
North Korea, which is still recovering from earlier floods.
29
August, 2012
The
first storm, Typhoon Bolaven, left at least 12 people dead in South
Korea, including eight fishermen killed in wrecks off the southern
coast. Damage in North Korea, which was hit late Tuesday and early
Wednesday, wasn't completely clear, though state media reported that
the storm knocked out power, submerged roads and houses, and ruined
farm land.
Typhoon
Tembin, meanwhile, was expected to reach South Korea on Thursday,
with its outer bands hitting North Korea later in the day.
Tembin
is expected to weaken as it reaches North Korea. Heavy rain, however,
often means catastrophe in the North because of poor drainage,
deforestation and decrepit infrastructure. The North's official
Korean Central News Agency said some areas of Hwanghae and Kangwon
provinces would receive up to 70 millimeters (2.8 inches) of rain on
Thursday and Friday.
Weather
officials had warned that Bolaven would be the strongest typhoon to
hit the region in several years, but its gusts in other parts of Asia
weren't as powerful as predicted.
KCNA
reported that Bolaven tore off a power station's roof, cut power
lines in Kaesong city and damaged more than 8,500 hectares (21,000
acres) of maize fields, hurting the chances of a successful harvest.
The
typhoon tore roofs off several public buildings in South Hwanghae
province and damaged TV relay facilities in North Hwanghae province,
KCNA said.
Many
houses and roads were submerged or destroyed and railroads were
covered by landslides in South Phyongan, Kangwon, and South Hamgyong
provinces, KCNA said.
Strong
winds and rain lashed Pyongyang, the North's capital, Tuesday, but
there was little apparent damage there.
Thousands
of young people had been brought to Pyongyang to celebrate the
anniversary of the founding of the country's main youth political
organization. The young delegates toured various places in Pyongyang
on Tuesday, state media said, and leader Kim Jong Un visited a
military unit on the country's eastern border with the South, despite
torrential rain.
In
South Korea, Bolaven temporarily left hundreds of thousands without
power, canceled flights, left nearly 100 families homeless and
damaged farm land. The storm also churned up rough seas that smashed
two Chinese fishing ships into rocks off southern Jeju island,
killing eight and leaving seven missing. Coast guard ships were still
searching for the missing fishermen after an eighth dead body washed
ashore Wednesday afternoon, coast guard spokesman Ko Chang-keon said.
The
coast guard rescued 12 fishermen from the ships on Tuesday, and six
others swam or were washed ashore.
The
storm killed at least four other people across South Korea, officials
said.
The
storms come as North Korea tries to help people with food, shelter,
health care, and clean water after heavy flooding in July, according
to a recent United Nations situation report. More than 170 died
nationwide, and tens of thousands of homes were destroyed in the
floods, according to official North Korean accounts.
Many
flood victims still live in tents with limited access to water and
other basic facilities, the U.N. report said, and there is worry
about increased malnutrition in coming weeks.
And
from the United States....
Storm
pounds New Orleans on anniversary of Katrina
Hurricane Isaac has pounded New Orleans and the northern Gulf Coast, delivering gale-force winds, heavy rain and the promise of flooding across an area from Louisiana's southern coast to the Florida Panhandle.
A
New Orleans police car navigates through debris as Hurricane Isaac
passes through Louisiana. Photo: Reuters
30
August, 2012
Water
spilled over a levee in Plaquemines Parish in south-eastern
Louisiana, which will result in ''significant deep flooding in this
area'', the National Weather Service reported, citing emergency
officials.
Isaac
arrived yesterday, a day before the seventh anniversary of hurricane
Katrina, which killed 1800 people.
Isaac,
with winds extending 282 kilometres from its centre, may produce as
much as 50 centimetres of rain in the region over the next two days,
according to the National Hurricane Centre.
''Isaac
is with us in a very significant way,'' New Orleans mayor Mitch
Landrieu said yesterday as the wind howled outside City Hall. ''We're
in the heart of this fight.''
Federal
officials warned that Isaac, the Category 1 hurricane that killed 29
people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, would generate high seas,
intense rain and serious flooding in coastal and inland areas for
days.
The
hurricane is the first test of the $US14.5 billion ($A14 billion)
200-kilometre ring of levees, flood walls, gates and pumps put in
place after hurricane Katrina by the US Army Corps of Engineers, the
agency that built the defences that failed New Orleans
catastrophically in 2005.
This
storm is nowhere near as powerful as Katrina was, but its breadth is
potentially wider.
Forecasters
continued to predict a potentially life-threatening coastal storm
surge, already reported in some spots in Louisiana to be over three
metres. Communities may be cut off for days, and flooding may result
in ''certain death'' in areas outside the levees.
''The
hazards are beginning,'' Rick Knabb, the director of the National
Hurricane Centre, said. ''It is going to last a long time and affect
a lot of people.''
''We
are ready for this,'' said Tim Doody, the president of the regional
levee board covering much of the New Orleans metropolitan area.
President
Barack Obama declared states of emergency in parts of Louisiana and
Mississippi as the storm approached.
''America
will be there to help folks recover no matter what this storm
brings,'' he said at a campaign event in Ames, Iowa. ''Because when
disaster strikes we're not Democrats or Republicans first, we are
Americans first.'
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