At least 15 people were killed on China's mainland in the past
two days as Typhoon Sepat spawned a tornado in eastern Zhejiang Province before landing in the
neighboring province of Fujian yesterday morning.
Severe weather conditions also necessitated the evacuation of
more than 900,000 people as a precaution.
Chinese villagers walk
through the rubble of houses after typhoon Sepat in Cangnan, east
China's Zhejiang Province, August 19,2007.
Zhejiang bore the brunt of the typhoon when a tornado swept
Longgang Town, Cangnan County, just before midnight on
Saturday.
Zhejiang authorities yesterday confirmed that 13 people were
killed in landslides and home collapses as the tornado tore through
the city. Another 60 were injured, according to the China News
Service.
Six of the injured were listed in serious condition, the agency
said, citing the provincial flood headquarters.
The dead included a man in his 40s who was killed when the van
in which he was riding was knocked off the road by a landslide.
Eighteen others in the van survived.
A man pushes his tricycle
through a flooded street after the typhoon Sepat in Wenzhou, east
China's Zhejiang Province, August 19, 2007.
As of yesterday afternoon, the severe weather had disrupted the
life of nearly two million residents in the cities of Lishui,
Taizhou and Wenzhou, which administers Cangnan, in Zhejiang, the
report said.
Meanwhile, the tornado toppled more than 1,100 homes,
damaged 22,700 hectares of crops and 800 hectares of fish farms
across the province.
Floodwater and landslides triggered by rain also damaged more
than 370 kilometers of highways and about 340 kilometers of power
lines, local authorities said. Levees broke at nearly 200 sites,
totaling about 22 kilometers, they added.
Across the province, Mother Nature's rage also suspended
operations at more than 2,100 factories and plants.
Zhejiang officials put the immediate economic losses from the
weather at an estimated 840 million yuan (US$111 million).
Chinese fishermen arrange
the boats after the typhoon Sepat in Quanzhou, east China's Fujian
Province, August 19, 2007.
Sepat, named after a Malaysian freshwater fish, landed in
Chongwu Town, Hui'an County of Fujian's Quanzhou City, at 2 AM
yesterday.
Fujian officials said a landslide killed two people and left
another one missing yesterday.
The storm lashed the central and northern parts of Fujian with
gale force winds and heavy rain. Within a 24-hour period
that lasted up to 8 AM yesterday, rainfall topped 300
millimeters in two areas of Fujian and 200 millimeters in 11
counties and cities. Fujian has 95 counties, cities and
prefectures.
The typhoon damaged 366 houses in Quanzhou, inundated 5,920
hectares of crops, and cut off road traffic and power supply lines,
affecting 162,600 people and inflicting an economic loss of 72
million yuan, local authorities said.
Chinese soldiers evacuate
university students from a flooded campus in Fuzhou, east China's
Fujian Province, August 19, 2007. Some 2,500 students from Fuzhou
University were transferred to safe areas after their campus was
submerged and the electricity was cut off for one day due to the
typhoon Sepat.
Heavy rains caused by Sepat also led to a train station
collapsing west of Fuzhou, Fujian's capital, causing the derailment
of six carriages of a cargo train.
Some air traffic was halted in Fujian but resumed later
yesterday, Fujian authorities said.
Sepat late yesterday morning weakened to a strong tropical
storm. It moved northwest and is expected to enter Fujian's
neighboring Jiangxi Province this morning.
(Shanghai Daily August 20, 2007)