Typhoon Doksuri: Rain hits northern China as weaker storm rolls inland

Doksuri was second-strongest hurricane to hit province of Fujian since Typhoon Meranti in 2016

Deluges caused by Typhoon Doksuri have triggered landslides in parts of China as rescue operations got underway on Saturday.

Rain began to soak northern China on Saturday as Typhoon Doksuri, one of the strongest storms to hit the country in years, rolled toward Beijing after pummelling the Philippines and Taiwan, and lashing China’s coast.

A broad area encompassing the capital faces a medium to high risk of rainstorm disasters over the coming three days, China’s national forecaster said.

Cumulative rainfall of 100mm (4 inches) or more is forecast over 220,000sq km (85,000sq m), potentially affecting 130 million people.

“Doksuri’s intensity continues to weaken but the impact is far from over,” the China Meteorological Administration said, warning the public to be vigilant and avoid high-risk areas in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region where localised rainfall could reach 600mm.

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Deluges caused by Typhoon Doksuri have triggered landslides in parts of China as rescue operations got underway on Saturday.

Over the weekend, small and medium-sized rivers in southern Beijing, central and western areas of Hebei, eastern parts of Shanxi and northern areas of Henan could swell above warning levels, while flash floods and geological hazards could occur around mountainous areas.

Beijing authorities suspended indoor and outdoor sports events and upgraded their flood control response.

Doksuri was the most powerful typhoon to hit China this year and the second-strongest to hit the southeastern province of Fujian since Typhoon Meranti in 2016. It forced the closure of schools and businesses and the evacuation of workers from offshore oil and gas fields, state media said.

Moving northwest and deeper inland, the storm weakened into a tropical depression in Anhui province early on Saturday at winds of 30km/h but as its wind speeds continued to ease off, Doksuri’s centre became harder to determine.

The central province of Henan and Shandong in the east will experience heavy rainfall, the forecaster said, warning of mountain torrents, geological disasters and waterlogging.

Doksuri made landfall on Friday, downing power lines and uprooting trees, affecting around 880,000 people in coastal Fujian with more than 354,400 people evacuated and resettled, and causing over €60.6 million (478 million yuan) in direct economic losses, state media reported.

In Doksuri's wake, social media posts showed emergency workers clearing fallen trees and landslides, and people wading in thigh-high flood waters.

Other damage reported around Fujian province include a billboard ripped off a hotel building by winds in Putian city, a large tree falling over a man who was later rescued and a garment factory in port city Quanzhou catching fire.

Fuzhou city suspended metro services on Saturday morning as subway stations remained waterlogged. The city, along with neighbouring cities Putian and Xianyou, reported the heaviest daily precipitation since 1961.

Before hitting China, Doksuri roared through Taiwan and the northern Philippines, where rain and strong winds that led to the capsize of a ferry in which at least 25 people died. — Reuters

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