Tens of thousands evacuated as Typhoon Kajiki hits Vietnam with over-130kph gales
Vietnam has vacated tens of thousands of inhabitants as the Typhoon Curik has made a landfall, causing catastrophic winds 130 kilometers per hour and more than heavy rainfall. Officials described the storm as one of the strongest in recent years, warned of dangerous storm growth, floods and landslides in coastal and mountain regions. Emergency teams have been deployed, schools and offices have been closed, and fishing vessels have ordered back to Edge to reduce the risk. Power outages have already been reported in many provinces, while flights and train services must face major disruptions. The government urged local communities to be very vigilant in weak areas when the situation worsens. Meteorologists hope that the typhoon will gradually weaken, but take precautions that its powerful rain can cause long floods in areas younger. Neighbors also monitor the storm closely.
The Key points
- Thousands of residents took out for safety.
- Officials warned about floods, hurricane growth and landslides.
- Schools and offices closed in high -risk areas.
- Fishing vessels were remembered and the coastal activities were suspended.
- Power failure was reported in many provinces.
- Emergency teams deployed for rescue and relief operations.
- Meteorologists hope that the storm will weaken, but rain will remain.
- Highlights climate production growth in extreme weather events.
Disclaimer: This preview includes title, image, and description automatically sourced from the original website (www.thestar.com.my) using publicly available metadata / OG tags. All rights, including copyright and content ownership, remain with the original publisher. If you are the content owner and wish to request removal, please contact us from your official email to no_reply@newspaperhunt.com.