Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

Typhoon Ragasa Forces 2 Million to Flee Southern China After 14 Dead in Taiwan

Typhoon Ragasa Forces 2 Million to Flee Southern China After 14 Dead in Taiwan
folder_openMore from Asian States access_time 5 hours ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

Fierce winds, pounding rain and high seas battered Hong Kong as Super Typhoon Ragasa headed into southern China after causing a lake burst that killed at least 14 people in Taiwan.

Hong Kong experienced widespread damage on Wednesday, including fallen trees and flooding in many neighborhoods, with the storm surge smashing the glass doors of an upmarket hotel and flooding its lobby, according to footage circulated online.

Ragasa is churning away from Hong Kong gradually around noon [0400 BST] but the city will still be lashed by hurricane-force winds, according to the Hong Kong Observatory, which issued the highest level of typhoon warning overnight.

Ragasa has brought “significant storm surge”, with waters at coastal areas rising more than three meters above the reference level, the observatory added.

Macau, which also experienced widespread flooding, has suspended power supply to some low-lying areas, according to utility company CEM.

In Taiwan, at least 14 people were killed and 18 injured when a decades-old lake barrier burst in the eastern Hualien county after Ragasa pounded the island, according to regional officials.

The super typhoon killed at least two people while ripping through the northern Philippines.

China’s Ministry of Emergency Management said the typhoon was expected to make landfall along Guangdong’s coast between Zhuhai and Zhanjiang from midday to late Wednesday.

Authorities across mainland China ordered businesses and schools to close in at least 10 cities across the south of the country, affecting tens of millions of people.

Streets were mostly empty as wind picked up on Wednesday morning in Yangjiang, a city west of Hong Kong near where the typhoon is expected to make landfall.

The Yangjiang train station – normally bustling with activity, locals said – stood empty, with rail travel suspended on Wednesday across the province of Guangdong.

Multiple districts in Hong Kong had instances of flooding, according to images circulated on social media and verified by AFP.

At the Fullerton Ocean Park Hotel, next to a theme park, a man was seen losing his balance after storm surge shattered the glass front doors and swept into its lobby, one of the videos showed.

“We are doing all we can to mitigate the impact brought about by the super typhoon,” a spokesperson for the hotel said.

Flood waters rushed into the seaside Heng Fa Chuen residential estate and covered its interior courtyards, another video clip showed.

Strong winds ripped off the top of a pedestrian footbridge, while many of the city’s tall buildings swayed and rattled in the harsh winds.

An off-duty firefighter surnamed Tse said he was “a bit worried” about the safety of nearby bamboo scaffoldings as he walked home after an 11-hour shift of “non-stop” work.

Rail operator MTR said train services on open sections were suspended, with limited service available on the underground sections.

Authorities said more than 760 people sought refuge at the 50 temporary shelters across Hong Kong.

The city’s airport operator said “only a limited number of cargo flights” were scheduled for Wednesday, with its website listing hundreds of cancelled passenger flights.

A five-year-old boy and his mother fell into the sea on Tuesday afternoon while they were watching the waves in the Chai Wan district, according to police. Both were in critical condition after they were taken to hospital.

The boy’s father, who reportedly jumped into the water to save his family, was also treated in hospital.

Hong Kong’s No 2 official, Eric Chan, previously said Ragasa would pose a “serious threat” comparable to the super typhoons of 2017 and 2018, which cost hundreds of millions in property damage.

Scientists say storms are becoming more powerful as the world warms due to the effects of climate change.

Shenzhen in China’s south-east earlier ordered the evacuation of 400,000 people.

Emergency management authorities in the Chinese tech hub said that except for emergency rescue personnel and those ensuring people’s livelihood, “do not go out casually”.

Other cities in the southern province of Guangdong that are implementing the measures include Chaozhou, Zhuhai, Do

Comments