Bualoi has so far damaged 245 houses, inundated nearly 1,400 hectares of rice and other crops
Two people died and 17 others were missing after Typhoon Bualoi hit Vietnam on Monday. With houses damaged and power grids knocked out. The storm brought flooding rains and huge swells before losing some of its strength as it headed towards Laos.
Bualoi had moved along the country’s northern central coastline before making landfall early on Monday. Causing waves as high as eight metres, according to the national weather agency.
Floodwater killed one person in Hue city, and a falling tree killed another in Thanh Hoa province. The government’s disaster management agency said.
Seventeen fishermen were missing after huge waves hit two fishing boats off Quang Tri province. While another fishing boat lost contact during the storm, according to the agency.
“I’ve witnessed many storms, and this is one of the strongest,”. Said 45-year-old Nguyen Tuan Vinh in Nghe An province as he was cleaning up debris.
Vinh’s neighbours said they stayed up all night trying to protect their homes. Even as the power to their apartment building went down.
Resident Ho Van Quynh said, “I stayed awake the whole night fearing strong winds would pull the door off.”
By 11 am (0400 GMT), the typhoon was moving over Nghe An province into Laos. With maximum wind speeds weakening to 74 kph from 117 kph when it made landfall, the weather agency said.
Bualoi has so far damaged 245 houses, inundated nearly 1,400 hectares of rice and other crops. And cut off access to several areas, the disaster management agency said in a report.
The report did not mention major damage to industrial properties, even though large factories lie in Bualoi’s path, including those owned by Foxconn, Luxshare, Formosa Plastics, and Vinfast.
Before the typhoon hit, the government evacuated more than 28,500 people, and airlines cancelled or delayed hundreds of flights as four central airports closed.
The cyclone has triggered heavy rains across most of Vietnam since Saturday, and authorities have warned of the risk of severe floods and landslides.
The weather agency forecast up to 500 millimetres of rainfall in several parts of the country from Sunday night through Tuesday.
With a long coastline facing the South China Sea, Vietnam is prone to typhoons that are often formed east of the Philippines, where at least 10 people died after Bualoi hit there last week.
