Death toll from Chanchu reaches 63 (AP) Updated: 2006-05-19 19:24
The Asia-wide death toll from Tropical Storm Chanchu rose to 63 on Friday,
with at least 27 fisherman still missing at sea as the tempest moved offshore
again after battering southern China.
A man stands on a road flooded by water after
being hit by Typhoon Chanchu in Xiamen, in China's eastern Fujian
province, Thursday May 18, 2006. [AP] |
The storm has cut a path of destruction across at least four countries and
territories around the South China sea since it rose to typhoon strength and
tore through the Philippines last weekend, killing 37.
Chanchu was downgraded from a typhoon on Thursday as it reached China's
heavily-populated southern coast, but was still powerful enough to cause
landslides and flooding and force the evacuation of more than 1 million people.
Storm-induced landslides and building collapses killed 15 people in Fujian
province and left four missing, the provincial Water Resources Department said
on its Web site.
Another eight perished in neighboring Guangdong province, it said, including
a boy and girl aged five and six and their 68-year-old grandfather who were
crushed when their home collapsed.
Taiwan and northern Vietnam were also pummeled by the storm's powerful winds
and lashing rain, though it largely bypassed the port and financial center of
Hong Kong.
Officials in Vietnam said 27 fisherman were missing since Thursday after
three boats sank in Chinese waters during the storm.
In Taiwan, two women were swept to their deaths by floods in the southern
region of Pingtung.
High waves also swept away three 17-year-old male students swimming in
Japan's southern Okinawa island chain, leaving one dead and another missing,
said coast guard spokesman Shoji Kawabata. The third was rescued.
The storm was headed toward northern Japan on Friday. It would continue to
weaken but bring heavy rain to Japan and possible flooding in northern Honshu
island on Saturday, forecasting service Weather Underground said.
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