Thirty-six people have died and nine others are missing
following the trail of destruction left by Typhoon Sepat in Fujian, Jiangxi, Zhejiang and Hunan provinces, the Ministry of Civil Affairs
said on Tuesday.
By 6 PM, the typhoon had flooded 313,900 ha of crops and damaged
61,000 houses, of which 16,000 collapsed, and forced the four
provinces in east and central China to evacuate 1.37 million
people.
Total economic loss in the provinces reached 4.97 billion yuan
(about US$663 million).
More than 100 counties in eastern and southern parts of Hunan
suffered torrential rain and high winds. By 4 PM, the worst-hit
county of Yongxing had received 196 mm of rain and reported the
death of a local farmer from a landslide.
The typhoon affected 1.53 million people, destroyed 60,000 ha of
crops and the province evacuated 270,000 people.
The local meteorological bureau predicted Sepat would linger in
the province for another 48 hours.
Sepat landed in Fujian at 2:00 AM Sunday, leaving a trail of
chaos in which landslides had killed 18 people and left 5 missing
in Fujian by 3?PM Tuesday.
The ninth typhoon of the year has brought an average 200 mm of
rainfall to most counties in Fujian since last Friday. The
worst-hit county of Jiaocheng received 490 mm.
So far, Sepat has affected 2.22 million people in Fujian while
destroyed 7,300 houses and 118,000 ha of crops, causing an economic
loss of 2.2 billion yuan (US$293 million).
Sepat has also caused 13 deaths and three missing in Wenzhou, a
manufacturing center in Zhejiang, including 11 deaths from a
tornado that smashed 156 houses on Saturday night.
On Sunday, a landslide triggered by the downpours hit a minibus
in Wenzhou, killing one of its 19 passengers. One woman was found
dead in the debris of her house the same day.
Sepat also brought rainstorms in Jiangxi Province over the past
two days, affecting 500,000 people in 164 counties and
townships.
By 9 PM Tuesday, the typhoon destroyed 1,847 houses and 136
sections of highways in the province, causing an economic loss of
324 million yuan (US$43.2 million).
(Xinhua News Agency August 22, 2007)