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Hong Kong and other parts of China grind to near halt as typhoon passes

Many workers have stayed at home and pupils in various cities have seen the start of their school year postponed until next week.

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Most of Hong Kong and other parts of southern China ground to a near standstill, with classes and flights cancelled as powerful Typhoon Saola passed along the coast.

Many workers stayed at home and pupils in various cities saw the start of their school year postponed until next week.

Trading on Hong Kong’s stock market was suspended and hundreds of people were stranded at the airport after about 460 flights were axed in the key regional business and travel hub.

Rail authorities in mainland China halted all trains entering or leaving Guangdong province from Friday night to Saturday evening, state television CCTV reported.

The Hong Kong Observatory issued a number 10 hurricane signal, the highest warning under the city’s weather system.

It was the first number 10 warning since Super Typhoon Mangkhut hit Hong Kong in 2018.

Asia Typhoon
A man sleeps on the rooftop of a residential building in Hong Kong ahead of the typhoon making landfall (Daniel Ceng/AP)

The storm’s eyewall, which surrounds its eye, was moving across the city at night, “posing a high threat” to the territory, it said.

It expected that winds would gradually weaken on Saturday as the typhoon moves west along the coast away from Hong Kong.

The observatory warned of serious flooding in coastal areas and said the maximum water level might be similar to when Mangkhut felled trees and tore scaffolding off buildings in the city.

In recent months, China has experienced some of its heaviest rains and deadliest flooding in years in various regions, with scores killed, including in outlying mountainous parts of the capital, Beijing.

As Hong Kong braced on Friday for heavy rains and strong winds, about 400 people sought refuge at temporary shelters and ferry and bus services were halted.

Residents of low-lying areas placed sandbags at their doors to prevent their homes from being flooded.

Super Typhoon Saola is seen from a Challenger 605 fixed-wing aircraft dispatched by the Government Flying Service near Hong Kong on Friday
Super Typhoon Saola is seen from a Challenger 605 fixed-wing aircraft dispatched by the Government Flying Service near Hong Kong on Friday (Information Services Department/AP)

Classes at all schools will remain suspended on Saturday.

But some residents, including security guard Shirley Ng, still had to go to work on Friday.

Ms Ng said people were stocking up on food to prepare for the storm.

“I just hope that the typhoon won’t cause causalities,” she said.

Weather authorities in the nearby gambling hub of Macao also warned of flooding, forecasting that water levels might reach five feet in low-lying areas on Saturday morning.

The cross-border bridge connecting Hong Kong, Macao and Zhuhai city was closed at mid-afternoon.

Macao leader Ho Iat Seng ordered a halt to casino operations.

A man with an umbrella struggles against strong winds and rain in Hong Kong
A man with an umbrella struggles against strong winds and rain in Hong Kong (Daniel Ceng/AP)

Motorway use in the city was banned for everyone except rescue crews.

China’s National Meteorological Administration said Saola could make landfall in coastal areas from Taishan city in Guangdong province to Shenzhen early on Saturday, or just skim across those regions.

Another storm, Haikui, was gradually moving towards eastern China.

Coupled with the influence of Saola, parts of Guangdong, Fujian and Zhejiang provinces will experience strong winds and heavy rains, the meteorological administration said.

It predicted Haikui would hit Taiwan’s east coast on Sunday.

Saola passed just south of Taiwan on Wednesday before turning towards mainland China, with its outer bands hitting the island’s southern cities with torrential rain.

The typhoon also lashed the Philippines earlier this week, displacing tens of thousands of people in the northern part of the islands because of flooding.

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