Haiyan approaches Vietnam
November 10, 2013Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most power storms ever recorded, is now headed west toward Vietnam.
More than 600,000 Vietnamese have been evacuated from their homes. The storm is expected to strike late Sunday after changing course.
The Red Cross said Haiyan's changed path meant that Vietnam's potential “disaster area could be enlarged from nine provinces to as many as 15.”
After weakening over the South China Sea, the weather system is expected to hit Vietnam as a category 1 storm, meteorologists said.
The Vietnamese government website that five people had died while preparing for the storm.
Haiyan barreled into the Philippines as a category 5 typhoon on Friday, crossing the archipelago from east to west in a matter of hours.
It produced winds of 235 kilometers per hour (147 miles per hour) with gusts of 275 kilometers per hour, and storm surges that raised raging seawater levels up to six meters (20 feet).
Death estimate 10,000
Tacloban, the capital of Leyte province, bore the brunt of the storm's force.
The typhoon destroyed about 70 to 80 percent of houses and other structures in its path, according to the police chief for Leyte, Elmer Soria.
"We had a meeting last night with the governor and, based on the government's estimates, initially there are 10,000 casualties [dead], said Soria.
As rescue workers struggled on Sunday to reach ravaged villages along coastal routes on Sunday, an official death toll had not been declared.
hc/ipj (Reuters, AFP, AP)