Hong Kong at a standstill as super typhoon Saola nears

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Densely populated Hong Kong and China’s Guangdong province have come to a standstill as millions of people were ordered to take shelter from ‘super’ typhoon Saola.

Hundreds of flights were cancelled, nearly 800,000 people were evacuated, and schools, businesses and financial markets were closed.

Packing winds of around 200 km/h, the super typhoon was predicted to make landfall by early Saturday in Guangdong.

Footage posted to social media shows savage winds sweeping people off their feet and snapping trees, and a huge storm surge lapping at Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbour.

Authorities warned that Saola could rate among the five strongest typhoons to hit populous Guangdong since 1949.

The super typhoon is one of three tropical storms churning in the northwest Pacific Ocean and South China Sea.

The second, Haikui (also called Hanna), is approaching Taiwan and is set to hit the island on Sunday before heading towards China’s province of Fujian.

The third, Kirogi — the most distant from land — was still classed as a tropical storm.

Across Guangdong, 785,155 people were evacuated from high-risk areas, while 13 cities delayed the start of the school term on Friday following the summer break.

In Hong Kong, hundreds were stranded at the airport by the cancellation of about 460 flights as the city of 7.5 million people raised its hurricane warning to the highest level.

“It’s very sad for me because I am not able to attend my daughter’s oath-taking,” said a tearful Ledenila Barizo, 54, who had been due to fly to the Philippines, as she paced in front of the airline desk.

The weather will deteriorate rapidly as the typhoon makes landfall, Hong Kong weather officials said, with storm surges of about three metres higher than the normal tide and maximum water levels reaching a record.

Weather authorities in China have said Saola could make landfall along the coast between the cities of Huidong and Taishan. Hong Kong and Macau lie in the centre of that stretch.

Authorities suspended trains services in Guangdong up to 6pm local time on Saturday.

Nearly 85,000 fishing boats operating off the coast of Guangdong had returned to port.

Shenzhen, a city of more than 17 million, suspended work, businesses and financial markets from Friday afternoon, warning that destructive winds could lash it through Saturday.

“Of course I’m worried, it’s forecast to be a big one and I want to get home,” a delivery driver surnamed Lu said on a busy day for the city’s supermarkets, many set to close early.

By 11am local time, airports in Shenzhen and the nearby city of Zhuhai had cancelled hundreds of flights.

As a safety precaution, the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau bridge linking the three cities was shut on Friday.

Officials of the Taishan nuclear power plant in Guangdong said it had halted outdoor operations and transferred out vulnerable materials, with emergency staff taking up duty.

North of Guangdong on the coast, the province of Fujian had evacuated 161,600 people as of Friday.

In the gambling hub of Macau, all casinos will temporarily close from 11pm local time on Friday until further notice, the government said. The casinos had just begun recovering after three years of COVID-induced lockdowns and travel disruptions.

Saolo is small in size but strong in intensity, Chinese meteorologists told Chinese state media.

The post Hong Kong at a standstill as super typhoon Saola nears appeared first on The New Daily.

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