Typhoon Lashes South China After Killing 64 in Philippines
Workers transfer sacks of grains from a toppled truck that fell into an area where the road was being repaired in Cagayan province, northeastern Philippines. Driver Alvin Buelta said his truck fell after he failed to see the road repairs due to the high floods caused by Typhoon Mangkhut on Sept. 14 night. The typhoon roared toward densely populated Hong Kong and southern China on Sept. 16, 2018 after ravaging across the northern Philippines with ferocious winds and heavy rain causing landslides and collapsed houses. By Aaron Favila/AP Photo
HONG KONG—Hong Kong and southern China hunkered down under red alert Sept. 16 as strong winds and heavy rain from Typhoon Mangkhut lashed the densely populated coast, a day after the biggest storm of the year left at least 64 dead from landslides and drownings in the northern Philippines.
Nearly half a million people had been evacuated from seven cities in Guangdong province, the gambling enclave of Macau closed down casinos for the first time and the Hong Kong Observatory warned people to stay away from the Victoria Harbour landmark, where storm surges battered the waterfront reinforced with sandbags. Mangkhut is due to make landfall in Guangdong later Sept. 16.