On
Chinese social media, videos showed pedestrians falling over and
struggling against the winds, flooded roads and onlookers
gathering around the beached whale in the dark.
Talim, the first typhoon to make landfall in China this year,
struck the coast late on Monday night in Guangdong province,
quickly weakening into a tropical storm. Overnight it moved into
Beibu Gulf, and by early Tuesday, it had made a second landfall
and moved into southern Guangxi region.
Wind speeds had fallen to a maximum 25 m/s (90 kmh or 56 mph)
near Talim's centre, as of 8 a.m. (0000 GMT), China's
Meteorological Administration said. The storm is expected to
further weaken and dissipate as it moves northwesterly into
northern Vietnam later on Tuesday, it said.
In Guangdong, after Talim's passing, firefighters rescued
passengers pinned in vehicles by fallen tree branches as they
cleared roadblocks and assisted other motorists to safety,
according to state media.
Nearly 230,000 people in Guangdong were evacuated on Monday
before the storm struck, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
Local authorities in Guangdong had also ordered the closure of
68 coastal tourist destinations, called back 2,702 fishing
vessels and ordered 8,262 fish-farming workers to be evacuated
ashore, Xinhua said.
In Guangxi's Nanning city, state media reported 35 passenger
train services have been disrupted and 26 flights cancelled
since Monday. In Hainan, an island province to the south of
Guangdong, railway services were gradually being restored on
Tuesday morning after being suspended the previous day.
The effects of the typhoon were felt more then 1,000 km to the
northeast in Fuzhou city in Fujian province. Residents there
spoke of counting their blessings for being safe after vehicles,
furniture and household appliances were washed away or damaged
by flash floods, according to a video shared on social media.
(Reporting by Liz Lee in Beijing and Upasana Singh in Bengaluru;
Editing by Devika Syamnath and Tom Hogue)
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