Typhoon Gaemi swept towards southern China on Thursday after killing at least two people in Taiwan, with nine sailors missing after their cargo ship sank in stormy weather.
The typhoon — the strongest to hit Taiwan in eight years — had already forced authorities on the island to shutter schools and offices, suspend the stock market and evacuate thousands of people.
On its path to Taiwan, Gaemi also exacerbated the seasonal rains in the Philippines, triggering flooding and landslides that killed six, and a tanker carrying 1.4 million litres of oil sank off Manila on Thursday with authorities racing to contain a spill.
By Thursday morning, the typhoon had weakened and “the centre has moved out to sea” at around 4:20 a.m. (local time), said Taiwan’s weather authorities.
Taiwan’s fire agency said it received a report early Thursday that a cargo ship had sunk off the island’s southern coast, forcing its nine Myanmar crew members to abandon ship in life jackets.
“They fell into the sea and were floating there,” said Hsiao Huan-chang, head of the fire agency, adding that rescuers contacted a nearby Taiwanese cargo ship to assist them.
Hsiao did not specify when the Tanzania-flagged ship sank, but said the rescue vessel arrived in the area at 8:35 a.m.
“(When the Taiwanese ship arrived) the visibility at the scene was very low and the winds were too strong,” he told reporters.
“When the weather permits, we will immediately dispatch ships or helicopters to rescue but at the moment it is not possible.”
Another official at the agency told AFP after the briefing that the sailors were missing.
Gaemi made landfall in Taiwan on Wednesday night with sustained wind speeds of 190 kilometres (118 miles) per hour at its peak.
More than 200 people were injured and at least two were confirmed killed — a motorist in the southern Kaohsiung city was crushed by a tree, and a woman in eastern Hualien died after part of a building fell on her.
Several cities, including Taipei, announced a second consecutive day off, with schools, government offices and the stock market closed, while hundreds of domestic and international flights were cancelled.
In the south, Kaohsiung residents saw their streets transformed into rivers, with some households flooded with rainwater.
‘Mountain torrents’
The storm is now tracking towards China’s Fujian province, which suspended all train services and put in place the second-highest flood warning alert level.
The national water resources ministry warned the day before that extremely heavy rains were expected to swell rivers and lakes in Fujian and the neighbouring province of Zhejiang.
In the Philippines, clean-up efforts were under way Thursday in the capital Manila as residents and business owners dumped soaked mattresses, bags of rubbish and other debris on muddy streets.
Street vendor Zenaida Cuerda, 55, said the food she had been selling had washed away and her house in Manila was flooded.
“All my capital is gone,” Cuerda told AFP. “I have nothing now, that’s my only livelihood.”
The region sees frequent tropical storms from July to October, but experts say climate change has increased their intensity, leading to heavy rains, flash floods and strong gusts. (AFP)