China on Alert for Heavy Rain and Floods From Typhoon Gaemi

View The Original Article Here

Typhoon Gaemi churned over southeastern China on Friday, with the local authorities warning that the storm, which left a trail of destruction in Taiwan and the Philippines, would bring torrential rain and flooding.

Gaemi made landfall Thursday night in China’s Fujian Province, where the local government shut down schools and nonessential businesses and evacuated more than 290,000 people by Friday morning. The international airport in Fujian’s Quanzhou prefecture canceled more than 160 flights because of the weather.

The storm had reported wind speeds of around 73 mph when it made landfall, according to the Fujian Meteorological Bureau, just shy of what would be a Category 1 hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean. Its intensity was lower than Wednesday, when it slammed into Taiwan with wind speeds equivalent to a Category 3 hurricane.

The Chinese authorities urged caution despite the weakening of the storm, which is forecast to head north in the coming days, crossing more than a dozen provinces. There has been heavy rain and deadly flooding for weeks in Southern China.

The country’s leader, Xi Jinping, held a meeting Thursday with China’s top decision-making body to coordinate flood prevention and disaster relief efforts, state media said.

And as of early Friday morning, some weather stations in Fujian reported more than 1.6 feet of rainfall since Wednesday. Forecasters said that other parts of the country could see as much as 2.6 feet of rain.

In Taiwan, Gaemi left five people dead and injured almost 700. Some parts in the central and southern parts of the island remained flooded Friday morning. The heavy rainfall triggered landslides, which blocked railroads as well as the main highway that connects the capital, Taipei, to the eastern coast.

There were rough seas in the region this week as the storm passed through.

On Thursday, a Tanzanian cargo ship sank near Kaohsiung in Taiwan, and a tanker carrying fuel oil sank off the coast of the Philippines.

Gaemi had killed at least 15 people in the Philippines as of Thursday, according to officials. The Philippine authorities said Friday that Gaemi had intensified monsoon rains in some parts of the country, raising the threat of flooding and landslides.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.