Vietnam floods kill 25 as new typhoon approaches

This picture taken on October 16, 2016 shows a police speedboat, loaded with boxes of instant noodles, preparing to leave to distribute the boxes as relief aid to flood-hit people in the central province of Quang Binh.  Severe flooding in central Vietnam has killed at least 25 people and destroyed thousands of homes, officials said on October 17, as the country braced for further destruction with a typhoon barrelling closer. / AFP PHOTO / Vietnam News Agency / STR
This picture taken on October 16, 2016 shows a police speedboat, loaded with boxes of instant noodles, preparing to leave to distribute the boxes as relief aid to flood-hit people in the central province of Quang Binh.
Severe flooding in central Vietnam has killed at least 25 people and destroyed thousands of homes, officials said on October 17, as the country braced for further destruction with a typhoon barrelling closer. / AFP PHOTO / Vietnam News Agency / STR

 

HANOI, Vietnam | AFP | — Severe flooding in central Vietnam has killed at least 25 people and destroyed thousands of homes, officials said Monday, as the country braced for further destruction with a typhoon barrelling closer.

Images from flood-hit provinces showed houses almost completely submerged and people paddling down waterlogged streets following heavy rain that started last week.

Four people are still missing after the deluge, which destroyed or damaged more than 240,000 homes in several central provinces since Friday, the Natural Disaster Prevention office said on its website.

State-run media reported that at least one local hydropower plant suddenly released water from its reservoir, which contributed to some of the destruction over the weekend.

The government said it was looking into whether the Ho Ho hydropower plant in Ha Tinh province should have released the water without warning.

Meanwhile, Typhoon Sarika which lashed the Philippines over the weekend is expected to hit Vietnam Wednesday, with northern provinces on high alert.

Local forecasters said they expect Sarika to be the biggest storm of the season. Authorities said they may issue evacuation orders and a ban on ships going to sea, according to reports.

Vietnam is hit every year by up to a dozen tropical storms or typhoons, which often cause widespread destruction along coastal regions.

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