Vietnam is evacuating some 1.3 million people as it gears up emergency rescue preparations for the arrival of Typhoon Molave days after it ravaged the Philippines.
Written content from Anthony Esguerra | Vice
Packing winds of 125 kph (77 miles), Molave moved off the Philippine island of Luzon on Monday and it is expected to make landfall in central Vietnam on Tuesday evening, according to state media.
Molave will be the fourth storm to hit Vietnam within a month and comes as the Southeast Asian country is still reeling from stronger than usual seasonal flooding and landslides that have killed at least 119 people and displaced some 90,000 residents in the central region.
Vietnam’s prime minister instructed government agencies and the military to prepare for possible search and rescue missions, anticipating casualties as he compared Molave to the 2017 Typhoon Damrey that killed at least 100 people.
“Troops must deploy full force to support people, including mobilizing helicopters, tanks and other means of transportation if needed,” leader Nguyen Xuan Phuc said, Reuters reported.
In the Philippines, Molave brought heavy rains that caused flash floods and landslides that left three people dead and forced 150,000 people out of their homes amid the pandemic. Thirteen people were also reported missing.
Videos and photos that circulated online showed shoulder-level floods in homes and churchgoers sitting in flooded pews while howling winds uprooted trees and damaged power and communication lines.
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