Sunday, October 7, 2007

Typhoon hits Taiwan

From: Faith Hung and Ralph Jennings

TAIPEI (Reuters) - Typhoon Krosa slammed into Taiwan on Saturday, with strong winds and heavy rains cutting power and cancelling flights while mainland China braced for what it called a serious impact.

Authorities in China ordered the provinces of Zhejiang and Fujian to call more than 27,000 fishing boats back to safe harbors, Xinhua said.

In Taiwan, disaster authorities said the storm shut down schools and businesses in the north of the country.

"The wind is tremendous here, and we've lost power," said Chuang Min-hsiang, of Taitung. "We're all at home doing work to protect ourselves from the typhoon."

Three people were hurt, the National Fire Agency said.

A service staff member at Taipei's Kaohsiung airport said more than 10 international flights were cancelled on Saturday.

EVA Airways, Taiwan's No. 2 international carrier, cancelled most of its afternoon flights, according to TV reports.

Northern Taiwan's main port in Keelung was closed at 6 a.m.

British typhoon tracking system Tropical Storm Risk (http://tsr.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/) called Krosa a category 4 typhoon.

Krosa was 160 km (100 miles) off the coast of Taiwan at 0200 GMT on Saturday (10 p.m. EDT on Friday) after picking up strength throughout the week, and was packing sustained winds of 184 kph (114 mph) and gusts of up to 227 kph (140 mph), Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau reported.

Tropical Storm Risk said Krosa was expected to weaken to a category 3 storm by early Sunday morning and a category 2 storm by Sunday, when it was expected to hit Zhejiang province of China, before heading northeast toward Fukuoka.

Xinhua news agency reported that tours during its week-long holidays were cancelled in Zhejiang's coastal area and all holiday-makers evacuated from the islands.

Zhejiang officials warned that Krosa was likely to make landfall there as early as Sunday morning, and parts of the province were already enduring torrential rain on Saturday night.

Likewise, neighboring Fujian province cancelled coastal tours and sent tourists to safer areas.

Shanghai, which will host a Formula One car race on Sunday, also braced for harsh weather, possibly later that day.

Typhoons regularly hit China, Taiwan, the Philippines and Japan from August through the end of the year, gathering strength from the warm waters of the Pacific or the South China Sea before weakening over land.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing)

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