Typhoon Dujuan hits China after claiming two lives in Taiwan
More than 100
flights in China's southern province of Fujian were cancelled and trains
suspended as the storm approached and crossed over the mainland.
By:
AP | Beijing |
Updated: September 29, 2015 4:12 pm
Visitors are held back by security at a damaged entrance to Taipei101
building until the winds from Typhoon Dujuan ease in Taipei. (Source:
AP)
A typhoon struck mainland China on Tuesday after lashing Taiwan,
where it killed two, injured hundreds and left hundreds of thousands
without power or water.
Typhoon Dujuan passed through Taiwan for three hours on Monday night,
bringing high winds and rain. More than 100 flights in China’s southern
province of Fujian were cancelled and trains suspended as the storm
approached and crossed over the mainland.
Taiwan’s Central News Agency, citing the government’s emergency
operations center, said Tuesday that the typhoon had left two people
dead, 324 injured and six mountain climbers missing. A total of 710,000
households were without electricity and 370,000 without water.
Staff clear debris from escalators at the damaged entrance to the
Taipei101 building caused by Typhoon Dujuan in Taipei, Taiwan. (Source:
AP)
Bon Jovi canceled concerts planned for Monday and Tuesday in Taiwan
because of the storm, which were to be the first ones there by the
American rock band in 20 years, event promoter Live Nation Taiwan said
on Facebook. Bon Jovi had added the second date in Taiwan earlier this
month along with a new concert in Bangkok after performances in Beijing
and Shanghai were abruptly canceled, reportedly over the band’s
inclusion of a picture of the Dalai Lama in a video that angered Chinese
authorities.
Typhoon Dujuan made landfall in southeastern Fujian province Tuesday
morning, packing maximum wind speeds of 119 kilometers per hour (74 mph)
near its center, before weakening into a tropical storm, according to
the National Meteorological Center. It was moving northwestward at a
speed of 20 kph (12 mph) and was due to reach neighboring Jiangxi
province by Tuesday night.
A security guard keeps pedestrians from fallen scaffolding from Typhoon
Dujuan at the main train station in Taipei, Taiwan. (Source: AP)
Ahead of its arrival, thousands of fishing boats returned to shore,
ports were closed and in one city classes at middle schools, primary
schools and kindergartens were suspended, according to the official
Xinhua News Agency.