/ 16 August 2006

China typhoon death toll rises to 319

The death toll from the strongest typhoon to hit China in half a century has reached 319 and could rise further, Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday.

Much of southern China has been battered by a series of typhoons and tropical storms this year that have now killed about 1 300 people.

Saomai, graded a ”super typhoon” with winds exceeding 216kph, barrelled into Cangnan county in the eastern province of Zhejiang last Thursday, flattening tens of thousands of houses, capsizing ships and damaging roads, bridges and buildings.

A total of 202 people were confirmed dead in Fuding city in the south-eastern province of Fujian alone, Xinhua said.

Most of them were sailors and fishermen who had tried to ride out the storm on their boats moored off the coastal town of Shacheng, bordering Cangnan to the north, Xinhua said. The news service added that 175 bodies had been recovered from the sea by Tuesday.

”The figure is still likely to mount, as another 94 people remain missing in the city,” the report said.

The overall death toll for Fujian stood at 230, it said.

In Zhejiang, 87 people were killed, most of them crushed by houses that had collapsed, and 52 were missing, Xinhua said.

Further inland, Saomai also killed two people and left one missing in Jiangxi province.

Saomai was stronger than a typhoon that killed about 5 000 people in Zhejiang in August 1956, according to Chinese media. — Reuters