Strongest storm in decades in south China kills 18

A vehicle sits under a collapsed building after landfall of typhoon Rammasun in Haikou

A vehicle sits under a collapsed building after landfall of typhoon Rammasun in Haikou

The strongest typhoon to hit southern China in four decades has killed 18 people and destroyed tens of thousands of homes, the government and state media said yesterday, while in the Philippines the death toll from the storm’s earlier destruction rose to 94.
Typhoon Rammasun killed nine people and left five missing after hitting Hainan island on Friday off China’s southern coast, the civil affairs ministry said in a statement. Nine others died later in the Guangxi region as the storm plowed into the mainland on its way north to Vietnam.
The storm destroyed 37,000 homes and ravaged 468,500 hectares of crops in Hainan and Guangdong provinces and Guangxi, causing USD4.3 billion in damage, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
The typhoon is the strongest to hit southern China in 41 years, according to the China Meteorological Administration. Wind speeds reached 216 kilometers (130 miles) per hour, with the storm knocking down power lines and damaging buildings, Xinhua said.
Authorities in southern China ordered the highest level of alert and suspended hundreds of buses, trains and flights across the region.
The typhoon had wreaked havoc in the northern Philippines last week, leaving 94 people dead. AP

Categories China