More than 266,000 people working at sea have been recalled to land in east
China's Fujian Province as tropical storms Pabuk and Wutip approached yesterday.
An official with the provincial flood control headquarters said all 50,401
fishing vessels had returned to harbor, while more than 266,000 fishery workers
and sailors were back on land by 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Pabuk, named after a type of large freshwater fish in Laos, made landfall in
south Taiwan on Wednesday morning. It is moving north-northwest at a speed of 25
km per hour and is expected to land in Shantou, south China's Guangdong Province
on Wednesday evening, according to the Fujian Meteorological Observatory.
The eighth tropical storm of this year Wutip, which means butterfly, came
into being in the Pacific Ocean to the east of thePhilipines at 8:00 a.m. on
Wednesday.
Wutip, with its center at 20 degrees north and 125.2 degrees east, is moving
northwest and is forecast to hit Fujian on Friday afternoon.
It would be more powerful than Pabuk, said Lin Xinbiao, deputy director of
the Fujian Meteorology Observatory.
Lin said the central and southern parts of Fujian would see heavy rains on
Wednesday and Thursday with precipitations up to 150 mm.
The education department of Fujian has ordered all schools to suspend classes
until the storms have passed, while the provincial tourism bureau has closed all
sight spots along the coast by Wednesday morning.
In the neighboring Zhejiang Province, ships and boats are also urged to
return and seek shelter in the harbors, said sources with the maritime affairs
bureau of the province.
The Shantou city of Guangdong Province is on full alert for the arrival of
Pabuk, with vessels recalled to harbor. Water resources authorities have
launched inspections of all reservoirs and ponds and farmers have been told to
harvest crops and fruit if possible. All kindergartens suspended classes on
Wednesday.
More than 60 Hong Kong-registered vessels have tied up in Shantou harbors to
ride out Pabuk.
Eastern and southern China are regularly affected by tropical storms and
typhoons in summer. Typhoons Bilis and Saomai claimed more than 1,000 lives in
China last year.
Rainstorms hit the Philippine capital region as the country was affected by
tropical storm Pabuk that passed by the northern region on Wednesday, the third
day in a row since flash floods started causing trouble for citizens on the
street, although there was no casualty reported.