Guangdong Province, Hainan Province and the
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in South China are braced for the
arrival of typhoon Prapiroon, the sixth major storm brushing China
this year.
Prapiroon was located at the northern part of South China Sea,
340 kilometers southeast of Yangjiang, Guangdong Province, as of 5
PM yesterday, according to the Central Meteorological
Observatory.
Packing winds of 119 kilometers per hour, the storm was moving
at 15 to 20 kilometers per hour and gathering force.
It is likely to land on the coastal area between Zhuhai and
Xuwen in Guangdong from noon today to tomorrow morning.
Heavy rains were forecast in the east and north of Hainan,
central and southern Guangdong and southeastern Guangxi.
Guangdong is still recovering from typhoons Kaemi and Bilis last
month, which caused a heavy death toll and huge economic
losses.
Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu urged yesterday that forecasting of
the typhoon be enhanced to reduce the impact of disaster.
He asked the government at various levels to take preventive
measures such as relocating people, calling back boats at sea,
enhancing surveillance over reservoirs for potential floods and
looking out for possible landslides.
State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters triggered
Class 4 emergency reaction mechanisms.
By noon yesterday, 65,000 people had been evacuated and 53,200
boats pulled to shelter in Hainan, Guangdong and Guangxi.
The train from Guangzhou to Haikou was suspended yesterday for
24 hours, according to railway authorities in Guangzhou.
Prapiroon, the Thai word for rain god, comes in the wake of last
week's typhoon Kaemi.
It has already lashed the northern Philippines, killing five
people.
(China Daily August 3, 2006)