Sunday 20 July 2014

Death toll from super typhoon Rammasun rises to 17 in China

Death toll from super typhoon Rammasun rises to 17 in China

Collapsed tree

19 Jul, 2014
A collapsed tree lies on the street after typhoon Rammasun brings torrential rains and strong wind to the area in Beihai, south China's Guangxi province on July 19, 2014.

The strongest typhoon to hit southern China in more than 40 years, super typhoon Rammasun, made its second landfall on July 18, authorities said.

Riders passes by a ruined banana field after Typhoon Rammasun in Haian Township, Xuwen County, south China's Guangdong Province, July 19, 2014. Rammasun, believed to be the strongest typhoon to hit south China in 41 years, wreaked havoc in western part of Guangdong, where 1,060,000 people were affected and 99,000 people were displaced

  • Typhoon Rammasun incurs huge economic losses in China
    BEIJING, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Direct economic losses caused by super typhoon Rammasun amounted to 26.55 billion yuan (4.32 billion U.S. dollars) in south China, official figures showed on Sunday.
    The strongest typhoon in four decades has ravaged 468,500 hectares of crops and destroyed 37,000 homes in Hainan Province, Guangdong Province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters. 


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English.news.cn   2014-07-20 23:59:20

 • The death toll from super typhoon Rammasun has increased to 17 as of Sunday.
 • The latest statistics showed more than 5.57 million people were affected by Rammasun.
• Rammasun caused economic losses of over 10.8 billion yuan to Hainan.

HAIKOU/NANNING, July 20 (Xinhua) -- The death toll from super typhoon Rammasun has increased to 17 as of Sunday as one more person was confirmed dead in the island province of Hainan.
Rammasun, the strongest typhoon to hit south China in four decades, brought gales and downpours to a number of southern provinces. At least two people are missing, according to local civil affairs authorities.
The latest statistics showed that more than 5.57 million people were affected by Rammasun as it swept dozens of southern coastal cities in Guangdong and Hainan provinces, and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
Eight people, including two government officials who were in a rescue operation, were confirmed dead in Hainan, while nine others are from Guangxi.
The typhoon seriously damaged power and water supplies, telecommunications networks, ports and roads, making rescue work more difficult.
Hainan, where Rammasun made its first landfall on Friday afternoon, suffered the worst damage.
The typhoon destroyed about 51,000 houses and 40,600 hectares of crop, causing economic losses of over 10.8 billion yuan (1.74 billion U.S. dollars), the provincial civil affairs authorities said.
More than 1.13 million households were cut off electricity. After two days of repair work, power supply in the city proper of the provincial capital Haikou was resumed Sunday night.
The local power grid company said power supply would resume in the entire city within three days.
The provincial government has allocated 100 million yuan (16.1 million yuan) to help the worst-hit areas.
As Rammasun moved out of Hainan, all the airports in the island had reopened by Sunday morning. Ferry, rail and bus services have also resumed.
The typhoon, however, scared many tourists who were stranded in the tropical island province.
"Strong gales, two feverish children, no food, no water and no drugs. These are the most terrible things I have suffered in my life," said a woman from Guangxi, who only gave her family name as Su.
Su was among more than 150 tourists stranded for nine hours in buses in Anding County when they were traveling from Sanya to Haikou. Gales were sweeping at 200 km per hour and the bus had to stop.
The tourists called police for help. They were later resettled at a local school and given food and bottled water.
Guangxi, which is still under the spell of the typhoon, has reported a direct economic loss of 1.63 billion yuan (261.63 million U.S. dollars) so far.
Twenty-four trains were suspended for three days starting on Friday in Guangxi, and railway authorities were expecting services to resume Monday.
Rammasun is expected to continue moving northwest at a speed of 20 kilometers per hour, bringing heavy rainfalls to the west of Hainan and Yunnan Province, according to meteorological authorities.

Typhoon Rammasun incurs huge economic losses in China
BEIJING, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Direct economic losses caused by super typhoon Rammasun amounted to 26.55 billion yuan (4.32 billion U.S. dollars) in south China, official figures showed on Sunday.
The strongest typhoon in four decades has ravaged 468,500 hectares of crops and destroyed 37,000 homes in Hainan Province, Guangdong Province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters.

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