Typhoon Soudelor yesterday developed into the world’s most powerful storm of the year as it took aim at Taiwan, Japan and China after trashing the Northern Marianas.
The storm was roaring across the western Pacific Ocean packing wind gusts up to 354kph, according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center which rated it a maximum category five, calling it a “super typhoon.”
It was stronger than Cyclone Pam, the previous strongest storm of the year, which killed at least 15 people when it slammed into Vanuatu, also in the Pacific, five months ago.
No deaths have been attributed to Soudelor, but it left a trail of destruction across the Northern Marianas, where Acting Governor Ralph Torres declared a “state of major disaster and significant emergency” after it struck late on Sunday.
Nearly 400 people were packed in emergency shelters after Soudelor ripped roofs off houses and left residents without power, water and wastewater services.
“I have seen multiple primary power poles down; I have seen cars flipped over the road; I have seen lots of torn roofs,” John Hirsh, executive director of the American Red Cross in Saipan, told Pacific Daily News.
Damage was “extensive” across the island and there had been significant damage to public infrastructure, he said.
Many roads were impassable in Saipan — the Northern Marianas main island, the seat of government and hub of the local economy — while in the main harbor, at least three vessels were ripped from their moorings.
In Hagatna, on neighboring Guam, the weather service warned boats to stay away from exposed reefs and beaches because of “hazardous surf” and “life threatening” rip currents.
It said Soudelor would continue to intensify as it sweeps across open water for the next 24 hours before starting to weaken. It is expected to be down to category four or three by the time it hits Taiwan, southern Japan and China late tomorrow.
Tropical typhoons and cyclones typically form in the western Pacific between May and October, with Pam the most destructive so far this year.
In addition to the fatalities in Vanuatu, about 75,000 people needed emergency shelter after their homes were destroyed and almost all food crops were wiped out.
Typhoon Maysak slammed into the Federated States of Micronesia in late March, killing at least four people and leaving more than 5,000 in need of food, shelter and other emergency assistance.
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