
Four killed in Vietnam landslide after flash floods
HANOI: A landslide following flash floods in a mountainous area of northern Vietnam has killed four people, the government said on Monday (May 19), as forecasters warned of further downpours.
The landslide occurred early on Sunday in Ba Be district of Bac Kan province following torrential rain on Saturday.
"A very big (noise, like an) explosion was heard from the top of the mountain. Then, soil, rock and water poured down from the mountain," a statement on the government's website quoted local official Tieu Xuan Tai as saying.
Tai said local residents had been aware of a 2m-wide crack on the top of the mountain that appeared several years ago.
Provincial authorities have issued warnings to the public and called for immediate safety checks for communities along streams, rivers and other areas vulnerable to landslides.
Residents must be immediately evacuated if they are at risk, authorities said.
Forecasters said rain in the area had been higher than normal so far this month, and further heavy downpours were expected in northern and central areas.
Vietnam is prone to tropical storms, which often cause deadly flash floods and landslides, but they usually hit the country between June and November.
Experts say human-driven climate change is causing more intense weather patterns that can make destructive floods more likely.
Last year, 514 people died in Vietnam due to natural disasters, three times more than in 2023, the agriculture ministry said.
In September, northern Vietnam was devastated by Typhoon Yagi, which claimed 345 lives and caused an estimated economic loss of US$3.3 billion.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
.jpg%3Fitok%3DaFZkgaRp&w=3840&q=100)

CNA
2 days ago
- CNA
Climate Conversations - Record temperatures, extreme rain incoming this summer
Climate Conversations The upcoming northern hemisphere summer is set to break more heat records. From holidays, to workers and crops - the searing temperatures are going to have consequences, as Jack Board and Liling Tan discuss.


CNA
05-06-2025
- CNA
Southwest Pacific hit by unprecedented marine heatwaves in 2024, UN says
SINGAPORE: Unprecedented heatwaves in the Southwest Pacific affected more than 10 per cent of the global ocean surface in 2024, damaging coral reefs and putting the region's last remaining tropical glacier at risk of extinction, the UN's weather body said on Thursday (Jun 5). Average 2024 temperatures in the region - which covers Australia and New Zealand as well as southeast Asian island states like Indonesia and the Philippines - were nearly half a degree Celsius higher than the 1991-2020 mean, the World Meteorological Organization said in an annual report. "Much of the region saw at least severe marine heat wave conditions at some point during the course of 2024, particularly in areas near and south of the equator," said the WMO's Blair Trewin, one of the report's authors. Extreme heat over the year affected 40 million sq km of ocean, and new temperature highs were set in the Philippines and Australia, the report said. Ocean surface temperatures also broke records, while total ocean heat content was the second-highest annual average, behind 2022. An unprecedented number of cyclones, which experts have attributed to climate change, also caused havoc in the Philippines in October and November. Sea levels continue to rise more quickly than the global average, an urgent problem in a region where more than half the population live within 500m of the coast, the report added. The report also cited satellite data showing that the region's sole tropical glacier, located in Indonesia on the western part of the island of New Guinea, shrank by up to 50 per cent last year.


CNA
05-06-2025
- CNA
Southwest Pacific hit by unprecedented marine heat waves in 2024, UN says
SINGAPORE: Unprecedented heatwaves in the Southwest Pacific affected more than 10 per cent of the global ocean surface in 2024, damaging coral reefs and putting the region's last remaining tropical glacier at risk of extinction, the UN's weather body said on Thursday (Jun 5). Average 2024 temperatures in the region - which covers Australia and New Zealand as well as southeast Asian island states like Indonesia and the Philippines - were nearly half a degree Celsius higher than the 1991-2020 mean, the World Meteorological Organization said in an annual report. "Much of the region saw at least severe marine heat wave conditions at some point during the course of 2024, particularly in areas near and south of the equator," said the WMO's Blair Trewin, one of the report's authors. Extreme heat over the year affected 40 million sq km of ocean, and new temperature highs were set in the Philippines and Australia, the report said. Ocean surface temperatures also broke records, while total ocean heat content was the second-highest annual average, behind 2022. An unprecedented number of cyclones, which experts have attributed to climate change, also caused havoc in the Philippines in October and November. Sea levels continue to rise more quickly than the global average, an urgent problem in a region where more than half the population live within 500m of the coast, the report added. The report also cited satellite data showing that the region's sole tropical glacier, located in Indonesia on the western part of the island of New Guinea, shrank by up to 50 per cent last year.