Typhoon Doksuri swept into southern China on Friday, unleashing heavy rain and violent gusts of wind that whipped power lines and sparked fires, uprooted trees and forced factories and shopping malls to shut.
The typhoon is the second-strongest to hit southeastern Fujian province since Typhoon Meranti in 2016 and it forced the closure of schools, businesses and the evacuation of workers from offshore oil and gas fields, state media said.
Doksuri has affected more than 724,600 people, said state-run CCTV, with 124,400 people evacuated and resettled.
So far, the storm has caused direct economic losses of 52.27mn yuan ($7.30mn), it said.
In the Fujian port city of Quanzhou, 39 people were reported to have suffered minor injuries, and more than 500,000 homes lost power, according to the government’s official WeChat account.
The retractable roof of a stadium in downtown Quanzhou was ripped apart as wind lashed its huge dome, sending glass and metal flying.
There were no immediate reports of fatalities. In 2016, at least 11 people died when Meranti made landfall near the port city of Xiamen.
Doksuri’s wind speed was clocked at 137kph as of 1pm (0500GMT), according to the National Meteorological Centre.
Hourly rainfall in Xiamen, Quanzhou and Putian exceeded 2.165 inches, according to the China Meteorological Administration (CMA).
“The whole of Xiamen didn’t go to work yesterday morning,” a local resident said.
“There are no cars on the roads, and factories and shopping malls are closed. Guess people are scared after Meranti.”
Social media video showed power lines sparking and bursting into flames as winds thrashed Jinjiang, a city of 2mn, while in Quanzhou massive trees were uprooted and left in the middle of roads. A woman’s voice in the background of one video shouted, “so many fallen tress. Some are broken down. It is a mess. This is too much. It is horrible.”
Social media videos showed strong winds blowing a large incense burner across the ground at a temple in Jinjiang and residents made makeshift barriers at doors to stop rain from flooding into apartments.
Residents said they had experienced power and water cuts in some areas of Jinjiang and Quanzhou.
Doksuri, the second typhoon to make landfall in China in less than two weeks, will move north and dump heavy rain on 10 provinces, weather forecasters predict.
It is expected to continue to move in a north-westerly direction and weaken in intensity, China’s CMA said.
The agricultural province of Anhui, which grows corn, rice, soybean and cotton, lies in the storm’s path. Analysts say it should weaken by the time it reaches the province and they are watching closely for potential crop damage.
Typhoon Doksuri has already left a wake of death and destruction in its path as it moved from the Philippines across southern Taiwan.
In the Philippines, a ferry sank near Manila, killing at least 27 after passengers, alarmed by strong winds, rushed to one side of the boat and caused it to overturn. As many as 36 people have been killed this week during Doksuri’s transit off the northern Philippines.
In southern Taiwan, the storm toppled trees and cut power to hundreds of thousands of homes, prompting authorities to shut businesses for a second day yesterday and warn of extreme winds, landslides and floods. Taiwan’s weather bureau assigned its second-strongest typhoon level to the storm.
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