
Typhoon Krathon makes landfall in Taiwan killing at least two people
Typhoon Krathon made landfall on Thursday in Taiwan's major port city of Kaohsiung, bringing torrential rains and fierce winds to the island's south.
Trees were brought down by high winds and roads were flooded, prompting the closure of schools and businesses. At least two people died in the storm and thousands have been evacuated.
The typhoon was forecast to move slowly north and weaken into a tropical depression by Friday before it reaches the capital, Taipei. It was expected to then head across the Taiwan Strait towards the Chinese coast. Winds were strong in Taipei on Thursday, but there was little rain.
In southern Pingtung, the typhoon was hampering rescue efforts after a fire tore through a hospital, killing nine people.
Kaohsiung residents were instructed by the Central Weather Administration (CWA) to 'take shelter ASAP' before Krathon made landfall there with wind gusts of 162 km/h (100mph).
The CWA later downgraded Krathon to a tropical storm, but warned that it was still expected to bring strong winds across Taiwan and heavy rains in some regions.
The Kaohsiung city government said offices and schools would remain closed on Friday after torrential rain and strong winds cut electricity and water supplies and triggered flooding in some areas.
Approximately 11,000 people were evacuated by Thursday across Taiwan, according to the Ministry of the Interior.
Krathon reached Taiwan after first blasting a remote group of Philippine islands, leaving one dead, one missing and eight injured, as well as damaging more than 300 houses, according to the country's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
12-04-2025
- Al Jazeera
Flights cancelled, millions told to stay indoors as strong winds lash China
Hundreds of flights have been cancelled and public parks are closed in Beijing, as strong winds driven by a cold vortex from neighbouring Mongolia felled hundreds of trees and crushed cars across the Chinese capital. Beijing issued its second-highest gale alert on Saturday, the first time in a decade, warning 22 million residents to avoid non-essential travel as winds could potentially break April records dating from 1951. The city's two vast international airports, Beijing Capital and Daxing, cancelled 693 flights on Saturday afternoon with warnings of more violent weather on its way, especially in the country's north and along coastal areas. More flights and trains were also cancelled as some parts of the country recorded their most powerful winds in more than 75 years, registering at up to 148km/h (92mph). The winds brought late snowfalls in Inner Mongolia and hailstones in southern China. In Beijing, the Universal Studios theme park was forced to shut operations at least through Sunday, while historic sites such as Beijing's Forbidden City, Summer Palace and Temple of Heaven were closed. Football matches and other outdoor events have also been suspended. A half-marathon set for Sunday featuring humanoid robots competing with humans in a bid to showcase China's technological advances was also cancelled. The winds dominated social media chats, with many people expressing concern for food delivery workers braving the conditions. 'In weather like this, we can choose not to order delivery – it's too hard for them,' one Weibo user wrote. Sandstorms raging over a stretch from Inner Mongolia to the Yangtze river region also crippled road travel in eight other provinces, Xinhua and state broadcaster CCTV said. Sandstorms were also expected to affect Shanghai from Saturday afternoon through to Sunday morning. High winds and sandstorms are generated in China's dry north, where the Gobi and Taklamakan deserts sit surrounded by grasslands and, mountains and forests. China has fought a decades-long battle to lessen the impact of sandstorms, especially in Beijing, which sits on the edge of an arid region, and where such storms can reduce visibility to practically zero, send sand into buildings and clothing and cause severe discomfort to the eyes, nose and ears.


Al Jazeera
08-04-2025
- Al Jazeera
Photos: Kinshasa residents call for action as flood death toll climbs
The death toll from flooding in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has continued to rise as authorities race to evacuate people. The floods over the weekend, prompted by heavy rains, cut access to more than half of the capital Kinshasa. By Sunday evening, the death toll had risen to 33 as authorities struggled to evacuate and support hundreds of families trapped in their homes. The DRC's Interior Minister Jacquemain Shabani announced on state television late on Sunday that 10 more people had been confirmed dead, adding to the previous day's count of 23. The heavy rains began last week, causing the key Ndjili River to overflow on Friday and submerge hundreds of buildings. While the situation had improved by Monday morning, some access roads remained blocked and vehicular traffic was limited. Many residents blamed the government for not responding quickly enough to the disaster. 'We lost everything and left everything behind,' said Marie Nzola, one of those whose properties were destroyed. 'The rain caught us by surprise late at night.' Officials said on Sunday that most of the deaths were caused by walls that collapsed. The flooding has hampered access to drinking water in at least 16 communes after water facilities were affected, the Congolese Ministry of the Interior said in a statement. Resident Clément Matwidi expressed frustration and asked the government for more support. 'Everything is lost due to the floods (and) we are here waiting for the government's decision,' he said. The government has set up at least four emergency shelters that were catering to hundreds of displaced families across the city, the ministry added. In 2022, at least 100 people were killed during similar flooding in Kinshasa. The disaster comes as the government tries to cope with a humanitarian disaster in the east of the country, more than 2,600km (1,600 miles) from Kinshasa, where conflict with Rwanda-backed M23 rebels has displaced hundreds of thousands.


Al Jazeera
09-02-2025
- Al Jazeera
One dead after landslide hits China's Sichuan province
Rescue efforts continue to find at least 28 missing people as landslide buries nearly a dozen homes. Published On 9 Feb 2025 Rescuers in southwestern China are searching for dozens of people missing after a landslide tore through a village, killing at least one person, according to Chinese state media. The landslide, triggered by heavy rainfall, took place in Jingping village in Yibin city in China's Sichuan province on Saturday morning. It left 28 people unaccounted for and buried 10 houses, according to state broadcaster CCTV. Nearly 1,000 personnel, including armed police, firefighters and medical professionals, continued rescue operations on Sunday, after President Xi Jinping ordered authorities to do everything possible to 'minimise casualties and properly handle the aftermath'. Some officers navigated through the remains of collapsed buildings, using drones and life-detection radars to locate any signs of life with the help of local officials who were familiar with the area, state broadcaster CCTV said. They rescued two injured victims and evacuated about 360 other people, CCTV reported. At a news conference on Sunday, authorities said preliminary assessments attributed the disaster to recent heavy rainfall and local geological conditions. They said these factors transformed a landslide into a debris flow, resulting in an accumulation of debris stretching about 1.2km (more than half a mile) in length, with a total volume exceeding 100,000 cubic metres (3.5 million cubic feet). 'A preliminary study shows this disaster occurred due to the influence of recent prolonged rainfall and geological factors,' CCTV said, citing local authorities. Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong was at the site to guide the rescue operation and visited the affected residents. He urged authorities to make every effort to search for the missing people, according to official news agency Xinhua. Liu also noted the surrounding slopes still pose collapse risks, calling for scientific assessment to ensure the safety of the operation and prevent another disaster, Xinhua said. China has allocated 80 million yuan (about $11m) to support disaster relief and recovery efforts. Landslides, often caused by rain or unsafe construction work, are not uncommon in China. Last year, a landslide in a remote, mountainous part of China's southwestern province of Yunnan killed dozens of people.