Powerful typhoon Doksuri lashes Philippines, threatens Taiwan and China
By Karen Lema, Bernard Orr and Yimou Lee
MANILA/BEIJING/TAIPEI (Reuters) - At least one person died as powerful typhoon Doksuri lashed the coastline of the northern Philippines with gale-force winds and torrential rain on Wednesday, bursting banks of rivers and leaving thousands without electricity.
Rain pounded coastal communities, including isolated villages tucked away in tropical forests. Many people had already been moved to safer areas ahead of the storm, which brought winds of up to 175 kilometres per hour (108 miles per hour).
"We're being battered here," Manuel Mamba, governor of the northern corn-growing Cagayan province, told Reuters.
The storm, labelled as a super typhoon by China's Meteorological Administration, is nearly 900 km (560 miles) across and is expected to sustain strength as it continues towards Taiwan and the Chinese mainland.
China's weather agency has already raised its storm alert to the second-highest tier and the manufacturing hub of Guangdong province has warned of the worst storm in a decade.
Members of the Philippine Coast Guard remove a fallen tree from a road following the onslaught of Typhoon Doksuri in Buguey, Cagayan province, Philippines, July 26, 2023. (Philippine Coast Guard/Handout via REUTERS)
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Doksuri is expected to make landfall in China on Friday, the second typhoon to land in under two weeks after Talim slammed into Guangdong on July 17.
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In the Philippines, at least one person drowned in the province of Rizal, the national disaster agency said.
More than 4,000 passengers were stranded at ports across the country after sea travel was suspended, the Philippine coast guard said.
Stranded passengers at the Manila North Port take shelter at the terminal amid cancelled trips due to Typhoon Doksuri, in Manila, Philippines, July 25, 2023. (REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez)
WARNINGS
The storm's outer rain bands were expected to hit southern Taiwan later on Wednesday, its Central Weather Bureau said.
"I come to buy vegetables and meat to prepare for the typhoon, but there's nothing left," local TV network CTS cited Lin, a shopper in the southeast city of Taitung, as saying.
"The shelves are empty, everything is sold out," she said.
Taiwanese authorities issued warnings for several counties and cities in the south including the major port city of Kaohsiung.
Members of the Philippine Coast Guard remove a fallen tree from a road following the onslaught of Typhoon Doksuri in Buguey, Cagayan province, Philippines, July 26, 2023. (Philippine Coast Guard/Handout via REUTERS)
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More than 300 people were evacuated in southern and eastern Taiwan as a precaution as Doksuri was expected to bring up to 1 metre (3.3 feet) of rain.
Nearly 50 domestic flights and four international flights, as well as many ferry services, were cancelled, while railway services between eastern and southern Taiwan will be suspended from Wednesday evening.
Ferry services to the Taiwanese governed islands of Kinmen and Matsu from the Chinese mainland were all halted.
Some train services linking densely populated cities such as Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Hangzhou along China's southern and eastern coasts were suspended.
Doksuri is expected to move northwest at a speed of 10-15 kph (6-9 mph) and enter the northeastern part of the South China Sea starting Wednesday night until Thursday morning, said China's Meteorological Administration.
State-run Guangzhou Daily reported that it could be the strongest typhoon that has landed or seriously affected eastern Guangdong in the past 10 years.
China upgraded its emergency response from Level III to Level II, which implies an oncoming typhoon could severely affect the entire country, according to the State Council's national emergency plan for flood control and drought relief.
The meteorological agency has urged people to stock up on food, necessities and candles as a precaution.
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(Reporting by Karen Lema in Manila, Bernard Orr in Beijing and Yimou Lee in Tapei; Additonal reporting by Beijing and Shanghai newsrooms; Additional writing by Ryan Woo in Beijing; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Kim Coghill)