Typhoon Prapiroon drove ashore on Thursday in southern China, where tens of
thousands of people had been evacuated, after killing six people and forcing
thousands to flee their homes in the northern Philippines.
Photo taken on August
3, 2006 shows the big wave in the harbor of Haikou, capital of south
China's Hainan Province as typhoon Prapiroon slammed into southern China
Thursday, Aug 3, 2006, bringing heavy winds and rain.
[Xinhua]
|
Prapiroon reached the coast
near Yangjiang in western Guangdong province at 1120 GMT and is moving inland at
15 to 20 km an hour, Xinhua news agency said, citing the Guangdong Provincial
Meteorological Station.
Prapiroon, "God of rain" in Thai, is bringing heavy rains to six provinces,
the Meteorological Office said on its Web site (www.nmc.gov.cn).
Much of southern China has already been battered by tropical storms Bilis and
Kaemi, which killed more than 30 and 600 people respectively last month.
A flood control official in Yangjiang said the city had evacuated more than
52,000 fishermen, workers on marine projects and people whose housing was deemed
unsafe. The authorities are closely watching reservoir water levels, the
official said.
"The traffic is basically normal except that pedestrians have to struggle,
and there are few motorcycles on the streets," the official told Reuters by
telephone. Guangdong commuters rely heavily on the two-wheeled vehicles.
The autonomous region of Guangxi, just west of Guangdong, is also on high
alert as Prapiroon will be the first typhoon to hit the area directly since
2003, Xinhua said. Its capital, Nanning, was buffeted by thunderstorms and gales
late on Wednesday.
Hainan provincial flood control office said the rain and wind were not as
strong on Thursday because Prapiroon skirted the island province rather than
making landfall as previously expected.
While southern China braced for the typhoon, a heatwave was affecting the
northwestern region of Xinjiang, areas along the lower reaches of the Yangtze
River, the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing and neighbouring Sichuan
province.
Temperatures in parts of Xinjiang are expected to be over 40 degrees Celsius
(104 F) on Friday, while Chongqing and Sichuan can expect temperatures of over
38 Celsius.
Hong Kong was not directly hit by Prapiroon, but strong winds have delayed
159 flights, while 92 were cancelled and 70 redirected to other places,
according to its Airport Authority.
Some 3,000 passengers have been stuck at the airport, and a further 300
flights were likely to be disrupted until midnight.
Sandy Song, a senior scientific officer with the Hong Kong Observatory, said
particularly strong winds near the airport were to blame.
"The typhoon is actually closer to Chek Lap Kok (Hong Kong airport) than
other areas so we can see a difference in wind speed across the territory," said
Song.
Strong winds forced the closure of some bus routes on Thursday, after at
least four people were injured by flying debris on Wednesday.