Tropical Storm Koto killed three people and left another missing as it approached Vietnam, authorities said yesterday, as strong winds and high seas buffeted vessels off the country’s flood-hit central coast.
Heavy rains have lashed Vietnam’s middle belt in recent weeks, flooding historic sites and popular holiday destinations, and causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage.
Authorities ordered boats to shore and diverted dozens of flights as Koto whipped up huge waves and dangerous winds, state media reported.
Photo: EPA/STRINGER
Two vessels sank in the rough seas, a fishing boat in Khanh Hoa province and a smaller raft in Lam Dong, according to the Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and Environment.
A total of three people were killed, and authorities were still searching for a fourth, it said.
Koto was more than 300km offshore yesterday morning, having been downgraded from a typhoon to a tropical storm.
Vietnam’s weather bureau said it was moving slowly and expected to weaken further before colliding with the coast this week.
It forecast rains of up to 150mm tomorrow and Wednesday from Hue to Khanh Hoa — regions that have only just recovered from historic floods.
Vietnam is in one of the most active tropical cyclone regions on Earth and is typically affected by 10 typhoons or storms a year, but Koto is the 15th of this year.
Natural disasters have left more than 400 people dead or missing this year in Vietnam and caused more than US$3 billion in damage, according to the national statistics office.
The Southeast Asian nation is prone to heavy rain between June and September, but scientists have identified a pattern of human-driven climate change making extreme weather more frequent and destructive.
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