More than 3,000 residents in southern and eastern Taiwan were forced to evacuate early yesterday as Typhoon Nanmadol approached after battering the northern Philippines.
The storm, packing maximum sustained winds of 137kph and gusts of up to 173kph, was expected to make landfall in either Pingtung or Taitung county this afternoon, forecasters said.
The Central Emergency Operations Center said Hualien, Pingtung, Yilan and Taitung counties had issued evacuation orders in the morning. Both Hualien and Pingtung counties needed to evacuate more than 1,000 residents.
Photo: Reuters
Nantou and Chiayi counties also evacuated residents in mountainous areas in the afternoon.
The Soil and Water Conservation Bureau said that 318 -mudslide-prone rivers in Yilan, Hualien, Taitung, Pingtung and Greater Kaohsiung were on yellow alert.
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) urged government agencies to be more vigilant in taking precautions against the typhoon.
Photo: Chine Jung-fong, Taipei Times
The government must remain on guard because judging from past experience, a slow-moving typhoon is likely to trigger more serious damage and casualties, Ma said at a briefing at the Central Emergency Operation Center, which is on watch for the typhoon.
With the medium-strength typhoon estimated to bring rainfall of up to 1,500mm, Ma said the government should make sufficient preparations, such as evacuating residents in dangerous areas and deploying military personnel for rescue work if a disaster occurs.
The Ministry of National Defense mobilized more than 35,000 officers and soldiers to be ready to pitch in with rescue, evacuation and disaster-prevention assistance.
Photo: CNA
A total of 35,197 uniformed men and women were being deployed in areas forecast to be hit hardest by Nanmadol.
The soldiers will be equipped with portable power generators, water pumps, amphibious assault vehicles, tanks, aircraft and boats and rafts to help people affected by the storm, the ministry said.
The first 500 soldiers were dispatched to Nantou, Taitung, Hualien, Chiayi and Pingtung counties, and Greater Kaohsiung, the ministry said.
Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times
In all, 160 vehicles were deployed at 42 locations in the south to move people out of vulnerable areas.
The ministry said it had dispatched two C-130 transport aircraft to rescue 140 stranded tourists on the outlying island of Matsu. All were safely returned to Taiwan proper.
While Nanmadol has yet to make landfall, the typhoon’s circumfluence brought substantial amounts of rain to eastern Taiwan.
Photo: Pichi Chuang, Reuters
As of 7:40pm, statistics from the Central Weather Bureau showed that Sioulin Township (秀林) in Hualien had received the highest precipitation so far at 319mm. It was followed by Wanrong Township (萬榮) in Hualien and Hengchun Township (恆春) in Pingtung, with accumulated rainfall of 308mm and 306.5mm respectively.
The bureau estimated that accumulated rainfall in mountainous areas in Hualien could surpass 1,500mm. Rainfall in Yilan and Pingtung could also reach 1,100mm and 1,200mm respectively, it said.
Fearing heavy rain could trigger landslides, several government agencies implemented preventive measures. The Directorate-General of Highways closed the entire Suhua Highway at 6pm because the area is prone to landslides during typhoon season. It also closed the section between Dayuling (大禹嶺) and Taroko on the Central Cross-Island Highway.
Photo: Liao Chen-huei, Taipei Times
The Taiwan Railway Administration suspended services on the South Link Line, with the last train departing from Taitung at 5:40pm. It also stopped train services between Hualien and Taitung after 8:58pm. The Alishan Forest Park was also closed yesterday morning.
The Forestry Bureau said all its national forest parks would also be closed because of the typhoon.
The Hualien, Taitung, Pingtung, Yilan and Penghu county governments, as well as Greater Kaohsiung and Greater Tainan have announced that government offices and schools will be closed today.
Keelung, Taipei, New Taipei City (新北市), Taoyuan County, Greater Taichung, Hsinchu City, Hsinchu County, Miaoli County, Changhua County and Nantou County have also canceled school today, but offices will remain open. Schools and offices in Lienchiang County will also be open today.
Bureau Forecaster Wu Wan-hua (伍婉華) said Nanmadol could make landfall somewhere between Taitung and Hengchun early in the morning today, but it could also slide through coastal areas in the south.
She said that the entire country would be affected by the storm today, regardless of which direction the typhoon moves.
Wu said the typhoon would move to the Taiwan Strait between Greater Taichung and Chiayi after it crosses the Central Mountain Range. Rainfall in southwestern regions is expected to increase during that period.
As of 7:15pm, the center of the typhoon was located 60km off the southeast coast of Oluanpi. The radius of the storm reached 180km. It was moving northwest at a speed of 8kph.
People with scheduled flights were advised to contact their airlines as some domestic and international flights could be canceled today.
A Singapore-bound flight and 22 domestic services were canceled yesterday, while shipping services between Taiwan and several offshore islands was interrupted.
As the typhoon dumped water on the nation, Water Resources Agency (WRA) Deputy Director Joses Wu (吳約西) said the A-Kung-Ten Reservoir (阿公店水庫) and the Mutan Reservoir (牡丹水庫) were already discharging water.
The agency warned residents in the coastal and lowland areas to the southwest to be on the lookout for flooding.
The Ministry of Transportation and Communications yesterday inaugurated the Danjiang Bridge across the Tamsui River in New Taipei City, saying that the structure would be an architectural icon and traffic artery for Taiwan. Feted as a major engineering achievement, the Danjiang Bridge is 920m long, 211m tall at the top of its pylon, and is the longest single-pylon asymmetric cable-stayed bridge in the world, the government’s Web site for the structure said. It was designed by late Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid. The structure, with a maximum deck of 70m, accommodates road and light rail traffic, and affords a 200m navigation channel for boats,
PRECISION STRIKES: The most significant reason to deploy HIMARS to outlying islands is to establish a ‘dead zone’ that the PLA would not dare enter, a source said A High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) would be deployed to Penghu County and Dongyin Island (東引) in Lienchiang County (Matsu) to force the Chinese military to retreat at least 100km from the coastline, a military source said yesterday. Taiwan has been procuring HIMARS and Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) from the US in batches. Once all batches have been delivered, Taiwan would possess 111 HIMARS units and 504 ATACMS, which have a range of 300km. Considering that “offense is the best defense,” the military plans to forward-deploy the systems to outlying islands such as Penghu and Dongyin so that
WHAT WAS ALL THAT FOR? Jaw Shaw-kong said that Cheng Li-wen had pushed for more drastic cuts and attacked him, just for the outcome to be nearly identical to his bill The legislature yesterday passed a supplementary budget bill to fund the purchase of separate packages of US military equipment, with the combined amount of spending capped at NT$780 billion (US$24.8 billion). The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) used their legislative majority to pass the bill, which runs until 2033 and has two main funding provisions. One was for NT$300 billion of arms sales already approved by the US for Taiwan on Dec. 17 last year, the other was for NT$480 billion for another arms package expected to be announced by Washington. The bill, which fell short of the NT$1.25
‘CLEAR MESSAGE’: The bill would set up an interagency ‘tiger team’ to review sanctions tools and other economic options to help deter any Chinese aggression toward Taiwan US Representative Young Kim has introduced a bill to deter Chinese aggression against Taiwan, calling for an interagency “tiger team” to preplan coordinated sanctions and economic measures in response to possible Chinese military or political action against Taiwan. “[Chinese President] Xi Jinping [習近平] has directed the People’s Liberation Army to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027. China has a plan. America should have one too,” Kim said in a news release on Thursday last week. She introduced the “Deter PRC [People’s Republic of China] aggression against Taiwan act” to “ensure the US has a coordinated sanctions strategy ready should