
Typhoon Wipha makes landfall in southern China after battering Hong Kong
After landfall at around 5:55pm (0955 GMT) on Sunday, Wipha weakened to the level of a severe tropical storm, with a maximum wind force of 30 metres per second, according to the CCTV report.
In Hong Kong, weather authorities lowered the typhoon signal to 8 from the maximum of 10, which had been hoisted for nearly seven hours, while more than 110mm (4 inches) of rain fell within three hours.
Much of the rain concentrated on the northern region neighbouring the mainland, the city's observatory said, warning of more to come.
In a statement, the government said 26 people sought treatment in public hospitals, while 253 flocked to its shelters, and 471 fallen trees were reported.
In North Point near the Asian financial hub's harbour, large swathes of scaffolding were swept off a residential building and onto the road.
A representative from Hong Kong's Airport Authority on Sunday said about 500 flights have been cancelled, while 400 others are scheduled to take off or land later in the day, affecting nearly 80,000 travellers.
Cathay Pacific Airways cancelled all flights with Hong Kong airport between 5am and 6pm on Sunday. It waived ticket change fees and arranged for rebooking. Most public transport in Hong Kong was suspended, including ferries amid high sea swells.
China's Hainan and Guangdong provinces were also put on high alert, according to the state news agency Xinhua. The cities of Shenzhen, Zhuhai, and Macao cancelled or delayed all daytime flights on Sunday.
Authorities in neighbouring Macau, the world's biggest gambling hub, also downgraded the typhoon signal to 8 from 10, warning of flooding in its inner harbour area and urging residents to stay safe, public broadcaster TDM said.
Hong Kong last hoisted the T10 warning signal for Super Typhoon Saola in 2023.
Wipha, which in Thai means 'splendour', also passed over the Philippines at tropical storm strength and drenched parts of Taiwan.
The typhoon also intensified seasonal monsoon rains in the Philippines, and two people have been reported missing, according to the country's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
More than 370,000 people in the Philippines were affected by days of stormy weather, including 43,000 who fled to government-run emergency shelters or homes of relatives due to flooding, landslides and fierce winds.
More than 400 houses were damaged in the onslaught, officials in the Philippines said.
Hashtags

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


Al Jazeera
a day ago
- Al Jazeera
China flooding kills dozens, including 31 trapped at elderly care home
Torrential rains and flooding across northern China have killed dozens of people, authorities say, including more than 30 elderly residents who were trapped at a care facility in a suburb of the capital Beijing. Officials said on Thursday that 31 people died at the Taishitun Town Elderly Care Center in the Miyun district, about a 90-minute drive from central Beijing, which was one of the areas hit hardest by this week's storms. 'For a long time, this senior centre was in the town's centre and was safe, and such was not included in the preparedness plans,' said Yu Weiguo, the Communist Party secretary for Miyun, expressing his condolences and adding it was a 'bitter lesson'. 'This showed that our contingency plan had flaws, and our understanding of extreme weather was inadequate,' Yu said. The care centre housed 69 residents, including 55 who were disabled in some capacity. The facility sat on low-lying ground near a river that had flooded after the unusually intense rains, local media outlet Caixin reported. Torrential rains began a week ago and peaked around Beijing and its surrounding provinces on Monday. In the space of a few days, the hilly Miyun district in the northeast of the capital saw rainfall of up to 573.5mm (22.6 inches). By comparison, the average annual precipitation in Beijing is around 600mm (23.6 inches). The Miyun Reservoir, the largest in northern China, saw record-breaking water levels during the rains. The Qingshui River, which runs through Taishitun feeding into the reservoir and is normally a small stream, was flowing at 1,500 times its normal volume on Monday morning when the disaster struck, Yu said. One Beijing resident's 87-year-old mother managed to get out of the elder care centre in Miyun, Caixin reported. 'She doesn't know where she got the strength, but she managed to climb onto the windowsill,' the woman's daughter said, noting her mother's roommate was unable to escape and drowned. Hundreds of thousands affected At a news conference on Thursday, Beijing's Deputy Mayor Xia Linmao said at least 44 people died over the past week in the city. In total, more than 300,000 people have been affected by the rain and flooding in the capital, with more than 24,000 homes, 242 bridges and 756km (470 miles) of roads damaged, said Xia, citing preliminary figures. In neighbouring Hebei province, authorities announced an additional eight deaths on Thursday and 16 deaths total this week. At least 31 people were missing in Beijing and Hebei province, authorities said. Meanwhile, in northern Shanxi province, authorities said on Wednesday evening that 10 people were dead after a minibus carrying farm workers washed away in heavy rain. Four people were still missing as the rescue continued, according to a city government statement three days after the bus disappeared.


Al Jazeera
3 days ago
- Al Jazeera
Photo: Deadly rain, landslides force mass evacuations in northern China
Published On 29 Jul 2025 29 Jul 2025 Heavy rain has killed at least 30 people and forced authorities to evacuate tens of thousands after swaths of northern China were lashed by torrential downpours that prompted landslides, according to state media. Weather authorities have issued their second-highest rainstorm warning for the capital Beijing, neighbouring Hebei and Tianjin, as well as 10 other provinces in northern, eastern and southern China, state news agency Xinhua said on Tuesday. The rains are expected to last into Wednesday, it added. As of midnight on Monday, 'the latest round of heavy rainstorms has left 30 people dead in Beijing,' Xinhua said, citing the city's municipal flood control headquarters. More than 80,000 people have been evacuated in the Chinese capital alone, local state-run outlet Beijing Daily said on social media. The death toll was highest in Miyun, a suburban district northeast of the city centre, it said. Chinese President Xi Jinping urged authorities late on Monday to plan for worst-case scenarios and rush the relocation of residents of flood-threatened areas. Beijing Daily said local officials had 'made all-out efforts to search and rescue missing persons … and made every effort to reduce casualties'. The government has allocated 350 million yuan ($48m) for disaster relief in nine regions hit by heavy rains, state broadcaster CCTV said on Tuesday. They include northern Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Inner Mongolia, northeastern Jilin, eastern Shandong and southern Guangdong. A separate 200 million yuan ($27m) has been set aside for the capital, the broadcaster said.


Al Jazeera
4 days ago
- Al Jazeera
Heavy rains leave 30 dead in China's capital Beijing as downpour continues
At least 30 people have been killed by severe rainfall and flooding in Beijing as heavy rains drench the Chinese capital, state media report. The deaths occurred in Beijing's mountainous northern districts, with 28 killed in Miyun and two in Yanqing, the official Xinhua state news agency reported on Tuesday. 'The latest round of heavy rainstorms has left 30 people dead in Beijing as of midnight Monday,' Xinhua said, citing the city's municipal flood control headquarters. Torrential rain started over the weekend and intensified around the Chinese capital and surrounding provinces on Monday, with Beijing recording rainfall of up to 543mm (21.3 inches) in its northern districts, Xinhua said. Authorities in Beijing have relocated more than 80,000 residents from areas worst hit by flooding, which has damaged dozens of roads and cut power to at least 136 villages, the country's national broadcaster CCTV reported. The heaviest rain in Beijing is expected early on Tuesday, with rainfall of up to 300mm (11.8 inches) forecast for some areas. Authorities ordered the release of water from a reservoir in Beijing's rural Miyun district, which was at its highest level since it was built in 1959, according to reports, with locals being warned to stay away from rivers downstream as their levels rose and as more heavy rain is forecast. Chinese President Xi Jinping late on Monday night ordered 'all-out' search and rescue efforts to minimise casualties, as authorities ordered people to stay indoors, closed schools, suspended construction work and stopped outdoor tourism and other activities until the emergency warning is lifted. In the town of Taishitun, about 100km (60 miles) northeast of central Beijing, streets were covered in mud and water on Monday, and uprooted trees lay in piles with their bare roots exposed, the Associated Press news agency reports. 'The flood came rushing in, just like that, so fast and suddenly. In no time at all, the place was filling up,' said local resident Zhuang Zhelin, who was clearing mud with his family from their building materials shop. Earlier reports on Monday said the torrential rains and flooding had killed four people, with eight others missing, following a landslide in the country's Hebei province, located south of Beijing.