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scotsfiancee
12th August 2006, 06:48
Typhoon Saomai kills 105 in China
190 missing


Associated Press
Last updated 11:15am (Mla time) 08/12/2006


BEIJING - The most powerful typhoon to hit China in a half century killed 105 people and left at least 190 missing Friday after it blacked out cities and smashed more than 50,000 houses in the southeast part of the country.

More than 1.6 million people were evacuated from the path of Typhoon Saomai before it struck late Thursday with winds gusting up to 170 mph, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

But it weakened to a tropical storm Friday morning and by midday the Hong Kong Observatory said its winds had fallen, dropping it to tropical depression status.

Hardest-hit was Wenzhou, a coastal city where at least 81 people were killed and 11 were missing, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

On Wenzhou's outskirts, 43 bodies including those of eight children were found in the debris of collapsed houses, Xinhua said. News photos showed relatives weeping over bodies covered in sheets and quilts.

It said Wenzhou suffered $560 million in damage, including more than 18,000 flattened houses.

Torrential rains were forecast over the weekend in a swath of China's south stretching from coastal Zhejiang and Fujian inland to the poor rural provinces of Jiangxi and Anhui.

Much of that region was still recovering from Tropical Storm Bilis, which killed more than 600 people last month, many of them in mountain villages and other inland areas.

Saomai, the Vietnamese name for the planet Venus, was the eighth major storm to hit China during an unusually violent typhoon season. It killed at least two people in the Philippines and dumped rain on Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Airlines canceled hundreds of flights.

In China, deaths were reported in Zhejiang province, where Wenzhou is located, and in neighboring Fujian province to the south.

In Fujian, power was knocked out in the cities of Fuding, Xiapu, Zherong, Fu'an and Ningde, state media said.

More than 32,000 houses were wrecked in Fujian, Xinhua said. The government didn't immediately announce statistics on damage to housing in Zhejiang outside of Wenzhou.

State television showed cars flipped over on rain-slicked streets, fallen trees and broken road signs. Exhausted evacuees sat in public buildings waiting out the storm.

Saomai was the most powerful typhoon to hit China since a storm on Aug. 1, 1956, that had winds up to 145 mph, Xinhua said. It said that typhoon killed 4,900 people in Zhejiang.

"It is the strongest typhoon that we have ever seen," Xinhua quoted an official as saying in Fuding, where at least two people were killed. The government said the city got more than 12 inches of rain in 12 hours.

Ahead of the storm, about 1 million people were evacuated from flood-prone areas of Zhejiang and 620,000 from Fujian, according to the government.

More than 20,000 soldiers and paramilitary police reportedly were mobilized for relief work. The Fujian government said it sent in 1,500 tents, 3,000 quilts and 50,000 pieces of clothing.

Late Friday, the government announced that it was allocating $21 million in disaster aid to regions hit by Saomai and other recent weather disasters.

Last week, Typhoon Prapiroon battered Guangdong province and the Guangxi region on China's southern coast, killing at least 80 people.

scotsfiancee
15th August 2006, 06:21
China’s death toll from Typhoon Saomai rises to 295



Agence France-Presse
Last updated 11:39am (Mla time) 08/15/2006


(UPDATE) BEIJING -- The death toll in China from Typhoon Saomai has risen to 295, with the number likely to climb further, the official Xinhua news agency reported Tuesday.

The discovery of more bodies in devastated coastal villages near the city of Fuding in the southeastern province of Fujian led to the rise in the death toll, Xinhua said.

The death toll in China from Saomai stood at 255 late Monday.

"Most of the people were killed when the super-strong typhoon broke the moorings on their ships which had sought shelter in the harbor," Xinhua said.

Xinhua said many families had gathered at the port, anxiously waiting for news of their relatives.

Fuding's death toll rose to at least 138, with another 86 people missing in the city, it said. Economic losses in the city were estimated at about 2.5 billion yuan, mainly due to lost boats and catches of fish, Xinhua said.

Saomai wrecked 50,000 houses and tore down power lines, blacking out parts of Fuding and five other cities in Fujian province. More than 1.6 million people fled their homes.

The death toll stood at 166 in Fujian, 87 in the neighboring coastal province of Zhejiang and two in Jiangxi, an inland province that was hit by flooding and landslides as Saomai moved west across China.

The China Daily newspaper said Tuesday that 52 people remained missing in Zhejiang.

Saomai, the Vietnamese name for the planet Venus, was the eighth major storm to hit China during an unusually violent typhoon season.

The region was still recovering from Tropical Storm Bilis, which killed more than 600 people last month.

Also Monday, Chinese soldiers were mobilized to help rebuild wrecked roads, power lines and water systems, the government said.

In Fuding, the storm damaged a 1,146-year-old Buddhist temple, Xinhua said. It said the gate of the Ziguo temple and 20 other buildings were knocked down, causing 5 million yuan in damage.

Saomai killed at least two people in the Philippines earlier and dumped rain on Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.

The Chinese weather bureau said Saomai was the most powerful typhoon since its record-keeping began in 1949 -- but not the deadliest.

In 1956, a typhoon with winds up to 234 kph (145 mph) killed 4,900 people in Zhejiang.