North, South Korea brace for strong typhoon, flights halted

High waves crash onto Haeundae Beach in Busan, yesterday

Hundreds of flights were canceled in South Korea while North Korea’s leader expressed concern about a potential loss of lives and crops as the countries braced for a fast-approaching typhoon forecast as one of the strongest to hit their peninsula this year.
Packing a maximum wind speed of 162 kilometers per hour, Typhoon Bavi was already lashing South Korea’s southern resort island of Jeju yesterday afternoon, flooding roads, toppling trees, ripping off signboards and knocking down at least one traffic sign as it passed over waters off the island’s western shores. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
South Korea’s weather agency said the typhoon will start to affect the mainland at night before making landfall in western North Korea early today. The agency warned of possible severe damage caused by very strong winds and heavy rainfall.
More than 460 domestic flights in and out of Jeju were canceled as yesterday afternoon, the Korea Airports Corp. said. South Korean authorities were also shutting down public parks and moving hundreds of fishing boats and other vessels, the Ministry of the Interior and Safety said.
In capital Seoul, health workers dismantled some makeshift COVID-19 testing stations over worries that the tents and booths may not withstand strong winds.
North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said that during a ruling party meeting on Tuesday, the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, called for thorough preparations to minimize casualties and damage from the typhoon. The storm comes weeks after torrential rains caused flooding and massive damage to homes and crops in North Korea, inflicting further pain to an economy ravaged by U.S.-led sanctions over the North’s nuclear weapons and border closures amid the pandemic.
KCNA said earlier that a typhoon warning was issued in most areas of the country, with officials moving fishing boats and applying protective measures on buildings, farms and railroads.
In China, authorities suspended ferry services across the Yellow Sea from the northern port of Dalian to the cities of Weihai and Yantai on the Shandong Peninsula as the typhoon closed in on the region. The government of Dalian, a city of 7 million people, issued a statement calling on the public to stay indoors whenever possible yesterday and today. KIM TONG-HYUNG. SEOUL, AP

Categories Asia-Pacific