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Typhoon Morakot update

Watchman

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Taiwan braced for typhoon battering

Updated on 07 August 2009
12_typhoon_g_k.jpg

Source PA News

A major typhoon has surged towards Taiwan, closing offices and schools, disrupting transport, and confining millions to their homes as its violent western fringe lashed the island with high winds and heavy rains.

The Central Weather Bureau placed the centre of Typhoon Morakot about 100 miles south of Taiwan's eastern county of Yilan.

It said it was packing winds of 90mph and moving west at a speed of 7mph.
 

Watchman

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How humourous of you ! :smile:

Just an avid reader of certain events :smile:

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HTOLAS

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Asset
Let me travel further back in time, 30 years to be precise, to yet another hyperactive typhoon season. In late July / early August 1979, when my section and I were on a mountain slope in southern Taiwan, a typhoon travelling west along the Luzon Strait took a detour north and slammed into the area where we were. In next to no time, our hitherto path turned into a river of m&d and we were drenched and cold. We tried to find our way to a structure higher up the mountain but it took nearly an hour to cover 100m.

Fortunately the storm passed and we were safe. Later though we saw the destruction the storm wreaked. Sugar cane fields looked as if a giant laid on them and all the canes snapped about 45cm from the ground. Houses were levelled and vehicles laid on their side.

Years later, Wikipedia tells me that we were lashed by a combination of Super Typhoon Hope and Tropical Storm Gordon. In fact, unknown to us then, Hope turned out to have had one of the longest paths in history - it formed in Guam, moved to Taiwan, China and HK, across the mainland, over bits of Vietnam and actually reached the Bay of Bengal before flzzling out over India.

The images of the last few days remind me of that 'adventure' I had. That adventure also showed me how tough the Taiwanese were, and still are. They will survive.
 

Watchman

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Watchman

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Watchman

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[COLOR="_______"]Typhoon Morakot
After forming as a tropical depression over the Pacific Ocean about 1,000 km east of the Philippines on August 2nd, Typhoon Morakot built in power and moved quickly west. Over the past several days, the storm has passed over the Philippines, Taiwan and Mainland China, causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage due to high winds, flooding and mudslides. Southeast China evacuated nearly 1 million people ahead of the storm, after Morakot broke many records in Taiwan, dumping a total of 2.5 meters (100 inches) of rain on the island. At least 40 people are known to have died so far, but hundreds remain missing - many from one village in Taiwan, reportedly engulfed by a mudslide during the storm. (36 photos total)[/COLOR]


What our press kept away from you !

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/08/typhoon_morakot.html
 

Watchman

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3805367715_a3bddf8a7e_b.jpg


The sky facing north east. Taiwan's typhoons (Morakot included) almost all come in from the south east and generally hit the east coast, southern and northern Taiwan pretty hard. The reason that Taichung and central Taiwan are spared to some extent is due to the height and proximity to the Central Mountain Range which blocks the brunt of the winds and some of the rains. Occasional some typhoons will spin over to the western side of Taiwan and come up the Taiwan Strait-when that happens Taichung gets its share of weather terror.
 
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Watchman

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1,300 still trapped after Taiwan typhoon

* Story Highlights
* Reports say 1,300 people are still trapped in remote areas after typhoon
* At least 121 people dead from storm with fears of much higher toll
* 31,000 people have been pulled alive from the m&d and debris

updated 1 hour, 24 minutes ago



SHIAO LIN, Taiwan (CNN) -- More than 1,300 people are still trapped in remote mountainous villages in southern Taiwan, victims of treacherous mudslides and floods from Typhoon Morakot, the country's semiofficial Central News Agency said Saturday.
Rescuers brave raging torrents to pull survivors from mudslides in Taiwan.

Rescuers brave raging torrents to pull survivors from mudslides in Taiwan.
more photos »

Rescue officials quoted by the news agency said 1,373 were trapped, and 75 helicopters were scheduled to conduct rescue missions Saturday in the counties of Kaohsiung, Pingtung, Taitung and Chiayi.

The storm hit last weekend, dropping 2.6 meters (102 inches) of rain on Taiwan. After hitting Taiwan, Morakot roared on to mainland China on Sunday, killing at least six people and displacing 1.4 million, authorities said.

The toll was much higher in Taiwan, where the storm was blamed for killing 123 people, according to the latest figures from Taiwan's National Disaster Prevention and Protection Commission.

Mary Yu, spokeswoman for the commission's Central Emergency Operation Center, said 53 people were unaccounted for.

At least 1,375 people awaited rescue in towns inaccessible to rescuers who have faced torrential downpours, dense fog, rugged terrain and raging rivers. Washed-out roads and bridges have made some rescue operations impossible, the disaster commission said. Video Watch rescuers reach stranded villagers »
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Despite the obstacles, 2,518 people were rescued on Saturday, Yu said.

Southern and central Taiwan were hardest hit by the storm.

Mudslides flattened some places in southern Taiwan, including the small village of Shiao Lin. Authorities believe hundreds of people could be trapped under five stories of m&d in the village.

A memorial service was being held under a tent where framed pictures of the dead were crowded on tables.

"He's gone, he's gone, that one's gone, all these grandchildren are gone," said a tearful Yu Chin Chih. She lost 10 members of her family.

"We went to Shiao Lin village for the first time yesterday to look for their bodies. But then I realized there's nothing you can do. We couldn't find them," she said.

Rescuers on Friday tried to determine whether the m&d there was stable enough to bring in excavators to begin searching for bodies.

Since the typhoon made landfall over the weekend, more than 31,000 people have been pulled from villages, according to official government figures.

Chen Chiu Lian, 76, who lives in Shiao Lin with her teenage grandson, Wang Hsin Hong, described the moments when the typhoon hit.

"I had just finished eating. My grandson was taking a nap. It rained and rained. There was water to my left and to my right ... The next day, it was still raining.

"Our house was like a boat. The water was like an ocean. How can you escape? There was no way to escape. My grandson told me to swim. I was swimming and crawling through the water and debris.
 

Watchman

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Watchman

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