Thousands evacuated from China coast as typhoon batters Taiwan
TAIPEI: Two people were killed and 72 injured when a powerful typhoon slammed into Taiwan’s eastern coast with ferocious winds and torrential rains.
Super typhoon Nepartak drove thousands of people from their homes, disrupting power supplies and grounding more than 600 flights, authorities said.
Television showed toppled motorcycles and signboards being ripped from buildings and swept across roads in southeast Taiwan, where the year’s first typhoon made landfall.
By afternoon, the typhoon had moved into the Taiwan Strait, weakening as it headed towards China’s southeastern province of Fujian, but flooding and strong winds continued to lash the island’s central and southern areas.
More than 17,300 people were evacuated from their homes, and over 517,000 households suffered power outages, emergency officials said.
“The wind is very strong,” said a resident of Taitung, the eastern Taiwan city where the typhoon landed. “Many hut roofs and signs have been blown off.” Three deaths and 172 injuries were reported, bullet train services were suspended and over 340 international and 300 domestic flights cancelled, an emergency services website showed.
The typhoon halted work in most of Taiwan. There were no reports of damage at semiconductor plants in the south.
Tropical Storm Risk had rated the typhoon as category 5, at the top of its ranking, but it was weakening and should be a tropical storm by the time it hits Fujian on Saturday morning.