Taiwan cleans up after Typhoon Krathon

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TAIPEI (AFP) – Workers removed felled trees and swept up shattered glass in southern Taiwan yesterday as Typhoon Krathon was downgraded to a tropical depression after killing two people and injuring hundreds more.

The Central Weather Administration (CWA) lifted its typhoon warning early yesterday as the storm slowly dissipated after slamming the day before, bringing mudslides, flooding and destructive winds.

Two people were killed, one was missing and nearly 700 were reported injured, with more than 70,000 homes still without power as of yesterday afternoon.

In the coastal city of Kaohsiung, where schools and offices remained closed, workers raced to clear away trees and fallen advertising signs that still blocked many streets and a light rail track.

“I think that there will need to be a lot of tough clean-up work to be done,” a Kaohsiung resident surnamed Chan told AFP on Thursday night. “This disaster in Kaohsiung is quite severe.”

More than 1,000 soldiers have been deployed to assist in clean-up efforts in the seaport city.

Kaohsiung mayor Chen Chi-mai said they were “making every effort” to repair the typhoon damage.

Wind speeds of 56.3 metres per second, or 203 kilometres per hour, were measured in Kaohsiung on Thursday, according to the CWA.

Krathon uprooted trees, blew cargo containers off a pier and shattered the glass doors of businesses across the city.

Local TV footage showed convenience store workers trying to brace a glass door before it was shattered by strong gusts, sending goods flying inside the shop.

The typhoon also disrupted water supplies in nearly 130,000 homes across Kaohsiung.

In southern Pingtung, which also remained shuttered, the typhoon hampered rescue efforts when a fire tore through a hospital, killing nine people on Thursday. Torrential rain also lashed northern Taiwan during the typhoon, triggering landslides in New Taipei City and Keelung, where about a dozen garbage trucks and other vehicles were buried in mud yesterday after a slope collapsed near an incinerator facility where they were parked, local media reported.

Taiwan is accustomed to frequent tropical storms from July to October but scientists have warned climate change is increasing their intensity, leading to heavy rains.

A man inspects the damage at a restaurant after Typhoon Krathon landed in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. PHOTO: AFP