Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Tyfoon ... ( cnn)


Typhoon aftermath
NEW: Dozens dead, even more missing in Taiwan from storm-caused flooding

NEW: Taiwanese villagers fear hundreds of people buried under mudslides

Reports: Mudslides crush homes, bury unknown number of people in China

More than 1 million people displaced in China, dozens missing, media report

BEIJING, China (CNN) -- The wrath of Typhoon Morakot has affected nearly 9 million people across four coastal China provinces and killed dozens in Taiwan, officials said Tuesday.


A rescue worker carries a child on Tuesday who survived flooding in southern Taiwan.

1 of 3 The typhoon, which stormed through the Philippines and Taiwan before slamming into eastern China over the weekend, has forced more than 1.4 million people to relocate on the mainland, China's Ministry of Civil Affairs said.

At least six people -- four of them in Zhejiang province -- were killed along the coast, and more than 6,000 homes were destroyed.

In Taiwan, Morakot was blamed for at least 38 deaths, 35 injuries and 62 missing people, said Yu-chu Liang, a senior official with Taiwan's National Disasters Prevention and Protection Commission.

Taiwanese villagers rescued from a massive mudslide unleashed by Morakot say at least 300 others are feared trapped beneath debris, state-run media reported Tuesday.

Morakot caused the worst flooding in decades in Taiwan -- where floodwaters as high as 7 feet were reported, China Daily said.

The village of Siaolin was just one of several engulfed by flooding and mudslides in southern Taiwan's Kaohsiung County since Morakot arrived over the weekend, Taiwan's Central News Agency reported.

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"The most pressing needs now are providing shelter, food and clean water for those who have had to evacuate their homes," said Hank Du, executive director for the humanitarian group World Vision in Taiwan. "We also want to make sure the children are secure and have a safe place where they are cared for."

The group has started to distributed food, cleaning supplies, raincoats, flashlights and other supplies to those displaced in several Taiwanese communities.

"Many of the affected live in remote areas, and the roads are in bad condition. Highways and bridges are flooded and blocked by mudslides, fallen trees and other large debris," said Wesley Chen of World Vision. "For those who can't reach shelters, we are working to find ways to bring aid to them."

Morakot-linked mudslides also have spilled into provincial eastern China, crushing homes and burying people in their path.

In one coastal town, a massive mudslide crushed a half-dozen buildings and buried an unknown number of people, the Xinhua news agency reported Tuesday.

The mudslide occurred about 10:30 p.m. Monday in Pengxi township in Zhejiang province -- one of eastern China's regions hardest hit by Morakot, Xinhua reported, citing local authorities. The incident destroyed apartment buildings standing four stories tall at the foot of a mountain.


Rescuers pulled six survivors from the debris; one was in critical condition, according to Xinhua. However, it wasn't clear how many others were buried, and rescuers were hindered by huge piles of mud and rock.

The storm made landfall in the coastal area of Beibi town, Xiapu county, in Fujian province, about 4:20 p.m. Sunday (4:20 a.m. Sunday ET), according to Xinhua. Morakot's winds were clocked at 118 kilometers per hour (73 mph) in its eye, according to the province's meteorological bureau.