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At least three dead after Super Typhoon Yagi hits Vietnam

Cars are covered in debris after Super Typhoon Yagi hit Hai Phong
Cars are covered in debris after Super Typhoon Yagi hit Hai Phong

At least three people are dead and more than a dozen others are missing after Super Typhoon Yagi hit northern Vietnam, state media reported.

The storm ripped off steel roofs from houses in Quang Ninh province, killing three residents, state media said, citing local and national disaster control authorities.

Super Typhoon Yagi uprooted thousands of trees and swept ships and boats out to sea when it made landfall in northern Vietnam, after blowing past southern China where it left two dead.

The typhoon hit Hai Phong and Quang Ninh provinces, packing winds exceeding 149km/h, the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said.

In Hai Phong, metal roof sheets and commercial sign boards were seen flying across the city sky as the typhoon hit.

Winds of around 149km/h were recorded as the typhoon hit Hai Phong

Further inland in Hai Duong province, a man was killed in the street after heavy winds brought down a tree as the storm approached landfall, according to state media.

Before hitting the mainland, the typhoon unrooted hundreds of trees on Co To island, about 80km from mainland Quang Ninh.

Several office buildings, schools and houses on the island were unroofed by the powerful winds.

Signboards lay scattered around the island, while electrical lines were snapped and tangled by the wind.

Local authorities said the typhoon was the most severe to hit the island in decades.

The storm killed at least two people and injured 92 others on southern China's Hainan island before hitting Vietnam.

A ship damaged by strong winds brought by Typhoon Yagi tilts into the water in Beihai, China

State broadcaster CCTV said Yagi brought winds of more than 230km/h, uprooting trees and prompting the evacuation of around 460,000 people.

The storm lashed "Hainan with heavy rain and gusty winds, leaving at least two dead and 92 injured", Xinhua said, citing local authorities.

Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh called on local authorities to evacuate residents from dangerous areas before the storm hit. He also urged other residents to stay indoors.

Around 20,000 people have been evacuated and moved to safer, higher ground in the north of Hai Phong, Thai Binh, and Hanoi, local authorities reported.

Many are being sheltered in schools, kindergartens, and other public buildings.

More than 457,000, many of who are professional men, were mobilised by the Ministry of Defence's rescue and relief department to deal with the fallout from the typhoon.

Some 2,000 vehicles and six planes have been sent to deal with the situation.

Sanitation workers clear fallen tree branches after Typhoon Yagi brought strong winds in Haikou, Hainan Province of China

Northern Vietnam has been experiencing heavy rains and strong winds since yesterday evening, including in the capital, Hanoi.

A woman was killed in the capital when a tree fell in the street after heavy rains.

Four airports in northern Vietnam, including Hanoi's Noi Bai International Airport, have been closed, while sailing has been banned since yesterday.

Yagi killed at least 13 people in the Philippines this week when it was still classified as a tropical storm.

It caused flooding and landslides on the main island of Luzon before transforming into a super typhoon in recent days.

Southern China is frequently hit by typhoons in the summer and autumn, which form in the warm oceans east of the Philippines and Thailand.

Typhoons in the region are now forming closer to the coast, intensifying more rapidly, and staying over land for longer due to climate change, according to a study published in July.