BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- As Typhoon Prapiroon
nears China, 406,343 people have been moved to safety in the southern provinces
of Hainan and Guangdong and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters said on Thursday that 62,023 vessels from
Guangdong, Hainan and Guangxi had returned to harbor as Prapiroon was
approaching faster than previously forecast.
Guangdong has suspended all passenger railway
services across the Qiongzhou Strait to the island province of Hainan.
The Guangdong Provincial Meteorological Station
forecast Prapiroon would strike the coastal area between Taishan City and Xuwen
County in Guangdong from Thursday afternoon to Friday morning, packing heavy
rains and strong winds.
The autonomous region of Guangxi, west of Guangdong,
is also on high alert as Prapiroon is expected to be the first typhoon to hit
the area since 2003.
Its capital, Nanning, had already suffered
thunderstorms and strong winds on Wednesday evening. More than 84,000 people in
Guangxi were relocated.
Prapiroon is within 300 kilometers of the coast of
western Guangdong. Its winds are reaching 12 degrees on the Beaufort Scale near
its center.
It is forecast to move westward at 15 kilometers per
hour in the next 24 hours and will gain strength.
Heavy rains hit most parts of Guangdong from
Wednesday and the typhoon will bring rainstorms to western Guangdong and nearby
areas from Thursday to Saturday. The typhoon will also bring force 9-12 gales to
sea areas and to coastal areas of western Guangdong.
The Guangdong provincial observatory called on
government departments to prepare for high waves, landslides, mountain torrents,
mud and rock flows, collapsing buildings and flooding.
Local railway authorities said railway services could
be only resumed when the conditions improved.
Prapiroon was expected to bring 100 to 180
millimeters of rain to Hainan, Guangdong, Guangxi and Guizhou, said Wang
Bangzhong, of the Chinese Central Meteorological Station.
Wang said August could see another five or six
tropical storms form in the South China Sea area, but only two or three might
make land fall.
Prapiroon killed at least five people when it crossed
the northern Philippines earlier in the week.
Prapiroon, which means Rain God in Thai, formed in
the South China Sea and strengthened into a typhoon on Wednesday. It is expected
to hit south China for three or four days, according to the Chinese Central
Meteorological Station.
Vice Premier Hui Liangyu on Wednesday ordered
meteorological agencies to maintain their alert status and ensure timely
warnings as they monitored the storm.
Hui, also head of the State Flood Control and Drought
Relief Headquarters, called for vessels to return to harbor and measures to
ensure safety of people in the storm's path.
China was being hit with more typhoons and tropical
rainstorms this year partly due to the warming ocean current in the northwest
Pacific and high temperatures in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, said Wang.
The year's first typhoon, Chanchu, hit on May 18, at
least 40 days earlier than most years. Prapiroon is the sixth typhoon to hit
China.
The fifth typhoon, Kaemi, in late July claimed 35
lives, including six at a military barracks in east China's Jiangxi Province.
The fourth typhoon, Bilis, lashed south and east
China and claimed 612 lives in southern China in mid July.
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