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        Typhoon Usagi kills 25 in China

        Xinhua/chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2013-09-23 07:13

        Typhoon Usagi kills 25 in China

        A man runs away from big waves at a dock in Shantou, Guangdong province on Sept 22, 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

        GUANGZHOU - At least 25 people have been confirmed dead after typhoon Usagi made a landfall in South China's Guangdong province Sunday evening, according to the provincial flood control headquaters.

        The deaths were spread across a wide area of eastern Guangdong, with 13 people found dead in Shanwei city, six in Shantou city, one in Chaozhou city, two in Jieyang city, and one in Heyuan city, according to the official website of the provincial flood control and drought relief headquarters.

        Electricity and water supply was cut off in the Huilai county, Jieyang city, and houses were toppled as wind speeds at the center exceeded 180 km per hour on Sunday afternoon, said Li Feng, a border police officer of the city, Xinhua reported Sunday.

        Border police have been mobilized to help with disaster relief there.

        Li said a woman was missing after the fishing boat she and her husband were on was capsized. The husband was found alive, but hopes for his wife, who cannot swim, were slim.

        Intercity trains between Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai were suspended at 6 pm and nearly 50 trains, including those along the high-speed lines to Beijing, Shenzhen and Hong Kong, will be suspended until Tuesday, according to the Guangzhou Railway (Group) Corporation.

        At a Xiecheng gas station on National Road 324 near Shanwei city, winds were strong enough to blow cars off the road and all traffic was stopped.

        Resident Li Huolong said he was on his way home in Shanwei, when the back window of his car was broken by the wind.

        Luo Hailing, an attendant who has worked at the station for years, said, "it is the strongest typhoon I have ever encountered. So terrible. Luckily, we made preparations."

        She said the station received a circular to prepare for the typhoon on Thursday, and they had covered all the machinery with tarpaulins before the typhoon hit.

        Cities including Shanwei, Zhuhai, Shantou, Huizhou and Jieyang have initiated the highest emergency response for wind protection, said He Guoqing, executive deputy director of the provincial flood, drought and wind control office.

        More than 47,000 fishing boats are in harbor, with nearly 20,000 fishermen kept onshore, He said.

        Educational authorities in 14 cities ordered schools to suspend classes on Sunday, a school day in China because of the three-day Mid-Autumn Festival which just ended.

        All beaches in the province have been closed.

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