Taiwan shuts down as strong Typhoon Kong-rey hits, one dead
Typhoon Kong-rey is expected to be the largest storm by size to hit Taiwan in 30 years.
· CNA · JoinTAIPEI: A strong Typhoon Kong-rey made landfall on Thursday (Oct 31) on Taiwan's east coast, the largest storm by size to hit the island in nearly 30 years, closing financial markets, causing hundreds of flights to be cancelled and reducing rail services.
The typhoon knocked out power to nearly half a million households, the government said.
The storm hit the mountainous and sparsely populated east coast between Taitung and Hualien counties, according to Taiwan's Central Weather Administration, with strong winds and torrential rain affecting almost all of the island.
The fire department reported one person had died when their truck hit a fallen tree in central Taiwan.
At one point a super typhoon, Kong-rey slightly weakened overnight but remained powerful as the equivalent of a Category 4 hurricane packing gusts of more than 250kph, according to Tropical Storm Risk.
Taiwan's weather administration put the typhoon's size at the biggest to hit the island since 1996.
"I hope that everyone in the country will co-operate in avoiding disaster and refraining from engaging in dangerous behaviour such as wave watching during the typhoon," President Lai Ching-te wrote on his Facebook page.
Administration forecaster Gene Huang said after hitting the east coast it would head towards the Taiwan Strait as a much weakened storm and urged people across the island to stay at home due to the danger of high winds.
Environmental officials were working on Thursday to prevent oil leaking from a Chinese cargo ship beached against rocks on Taiwan's northern coast after losing power in turbulent weather.
Warnings for destructive winds of more than 160kph were issued in the eastern county of Taitung, whose outlying Lanyu island recorded gusts above 260kph before some of the wind-barometers there went offline.
"It was terrifying last night. Many people on the island didn't sleep, worrying about something happening to their house," Sinan Rapongan, a government official on Lanyu, also known as Orchid Island, told Reuters.
Some roofs had been damaged and more than 1,300 homes had lost power but so far no injuries had been reported, she added.
Parts of eastern Taiwan recorded 1m of rainfall since the typhoon began approaching on Wednesday.
The defence ministry has put 36,000 troops on standby to help with rescue efforts while 1,300 people have been evacuated from high-risk areas ahead of time, the government said.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world's largest contract chipmaker and major supplier to companies like Apple and Nvidia, said that it has activated routine typhoon alert preparation procedures at all its factories and construction sites.
"We do not expect significant impact to our operations," it said in an emailed statement.
FLIGHTS AFFECTED
Taiwan's transport ministry said more than 300 international flights had been cancelled, along with all domestic flights.
Two Singapore Airlines (SIA) flights on Thursday - SQ878 and SQ879 - were initially retimed as a result of the typhoon.
In response to CNA queries, an SIA spokesperson said in an update that flight SQ879, which was scheduled to return to Singapore from Taiwan, was cancelled.
Taipei-bound flight SQ878 was diverted to Hong Kong.
The re-routed plane landed "uneventfully" at Hong Kong International Airport at around 5.10pm local time on Thursday, said the spokesperson. Arrangements were made to fly the affected passengers back to Singapore.
A Scoot spokesperson told CNA that three of its flights were cancelled - TR893, TR874 and TR875.
Taiwan's high-speed railway, which connects major cities on its populated western plains, continued to operate with a much reduced service.
Kong-rey is forecast to graze China along the coast of Fujian province on Friday morning.
Subtropical Taiwan is frequently hit by typhoons. The last one, Typhoon Krathon, killed four people earlier this month as it passed through the south of the island.
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