Hanoi:
At least four people died as Typhoon Kai-Tak barrelled across northern Vietnam bringing high winds and floods to several areas including the capital Hanoi, authorities and a report said on Saturday.
The typhoon, which made landfall late on Friday, was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday but continued to dump water on already flooded parts of the country.
A taxi driver was killed when high winds caused a tree to fall on his car in Hanoi, while two others died from electric shock after a cable was felled in northern Son La city, according to an update from the national flood and storm central committee.
In Bac Giang province a 46-year-old woman died after soil from a partially collapsed hill buried her house in the middle of the night, VNExpress news site reported.
Earlier more than 11,000 boats, including several hundred used by tourists at the UNESCO world heritage site Halong Bay, were ordered to stay close to the shore.
The Vietnamese army put 20,000 soldiers backed by helicopters, rescue boats and canoes on standby to handle any incidents.
Kai-Tak swept across the Philippines' main island of Luzon, dumping heavy rain on the Cagayan basin and other areas in the north, killing four people.
The typhoon, which made landfall late on Friday, was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday but continued to dump water on already flooded parts of the country.
A taxi driver was killed when high winds caused a tree to fall on his car in Hanoi, while two others died from electric shock after a cable was felled in northern Son La city, according to an update from the national flood and storm central committee.
In Bac Giang province a 46-year-old woman died after soil from a partially collapsed hill buried her house in the middle of the night, VNExpress news site reported.
Earlier more than 11,000 boats, including several hundred used by tourists at the UNESCO world heritage site Halong Bay, were ordered to stay close to the shore.
The Vietnamese army put 20,000 soldiers backed by helicopters, rescue boats and canoes on standby to handle any incidents.
Kai-Tak swept across the Philippines' main island of Luzon, dumping heavy rain on the Cagayan basin and other areas in the north, killing four people.
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