Sunday, August 19, 2007

This is NOT "Dean." This is Super Typhoon Sepat which dissipated today after making landfall over China



Super Typhoon Sepat
Super Typhoon Sepat came ashore in Taiwan on August 17, 2007, after bringing torrential rain and flooding to the Philippines the day before. Flights to and from Taipei, Taiwan’s capital, were canceled and Chinese authorities were taking emergency measures in anticipation of the powerful typhoon coming ashore on the mainland, said news reports. The typhoon was classified as
Category Five typhoon, at the very top of the scale, with sustained winds of 184 kilometers per hour (114 miles per hour).


It was a Cat Five Typhoon with maximum winds of 140 miles per hour.

Typhoon forces almost a million Chinese from homes
2:50PM Sunday August 19, 2007
BEIJING - Typhoon Sepat swept China's southern coast early on Sunday, forcing almost a million people from their homes and spawning a tornado that smashed buildings and killed nine people.
The tornado wrecked 156 houses and injured more than 60 residents in China's Zhejiang Province, Xinhua state news agency reported.
Experts believe the tornado was formed under the influence of typhoon Sepat, Xinhua said.
More than 900,000 people in southern China have been relocated to higher ground after the typhoon cut power and flooded homes in parts of Taiwan and the Philippines on Saturday.
Typhoon Sepat did not make landfall over the Philippines but exacerbated monsoon rains as it rumbled past the archipelago.
Disaster officials in the Philippines said three people drowned in flooding. Nearly 550,000 people were affected by floodwaters in Manila and the northern provinces, and over 3,500 people were sheltering in evacuation centres.
Parts of the capital and surrounding provinces remain under water.
Taiwan's disaster centre said on Sunday 27 people had been hurt in the typhoon. About 2,500 people were evacuated and nearly 9,000 homes were still without electricity.
- REUTERS