Tropical Storm Khanun was pouring intense rain on South Korea on Thursday, turning roads into chocolate-coloured rivers and leaving at least one person dead as it advanced north towards major urban centres near the capital.
More than a foot of rain fell in eastern and southern areas after the storm made landfall on the mainland in the morning. Emergency workers responded to increasing reports of flooding and landslides by the afternoon.
More than 16,000 people, mostly in southern regions, were evacuated from their homes as emergency workers responded to landslides, flood-damaged homes and rising rivers and streams. More than 40,000 homes were without power.
Officials shut down hundreds of freeways, streets and public parks and sent text alerts warning about the perils posed by Khanun, which is hitting South Korea weeks after torrential rain caused flash floods and landslides that killed at least 47 people.
People struggle to hold onto their umbrellas in the rain and wind as the Typhoon Khanun approaches to Busan. AP
More than 620 motorways were shut down, more than 450 flights were grounded and nearly 1,600 schools closed nationwide, according to the safety ministry and aviation authorities. Hundreds of train rides were canceled, ferry services were fully halted, and more than 60,000 fishing vessels sent to port.
According to airport authorities, out of the 2,138 flights planned for the day, 452 had been suspended as of 8:30 am. Incheon International Airport in Incheon, 27 kilometres west of Seoul, reported the cancellation or postponement of 145 flights out of a scheduled 1,048 flights.
At 14 other regional airports, the tally stood at 307 out of a scheduled 1,090 flights, according to Korea Airports Corp., which operates the airports.
A park is submerged due to typhoon Khanun in Busan, South Korea, on Thursday. Reuters
After making landfall at around 9:20am near the southeastern port city of Geoje, Khanun had passed central South Korea as of Thursday evening and was heading towards the densely populated Seoul metropolitan area, where half of the country’s 51 million people live.
The storm delivered heavy rain as it slowly plowed towards the capital, its strength diminished as it moved inland. Khanun was generating maximum wind speeds of 72 kilometres per hour, compared to around 129kph at the point of landfall.
The storm was expected to move into North Korea early on Friday, but forecasters said the greater Seoul area would still feel its force until Friday afternoon.
Among the areas of South Korea hardest hit by Khanun was the southern inland city of Daegu, where rescue workers navigated a submerged village in rubber boats, looking for residents who might have been left behind.
A 67-year-old man who was found unconscious near a bloated stream was later pronounced dead at a hospital, according to Lee Ga-yeon, an official at the Daegu fire department.
The city’s emergency workers were searching for another person who got swept into a stream while using a wheelchair.
In Gangwon province, a mountainous region on the east coast where the Korea Meteorological Administration forecast 50 to 60 centimetres of rain in some places, emergency workers in the seaside cities of Gangneung and Sokcho waded across rivers of brown, thigh-high water covering what used to streets.
In nearby Yangyang county, workers repaired the embankment of another stream that crumbled and was spilling water on a major highway.
In coastal Busan, South Korea’s second-largest city, several motorways were closed because of flooding. Emergency workers cleared uprooted trees that collapsed over roads and responding to destroyed walls and fences, broken windows, and other damage. A public park in the Yeonje district was submerged.
The neighbouring cities and towns of Gimhae, Ulsan, Pohang, Gimcheon issued flood warnings for areas near rivers and streams that flow through its urban districts.
At least 51 roads and 17 homes and buildings were destroyed or damaged by floods, the Ministry of the Interior and Safety said.
AP / WAM