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Taiwan braces for Gaemi as it gains strength




YILAN, Taiwan, July 25 ------ Gaemi, expected to be the strongest storm to hit Taiwan in eight years, is set to make landfall on the northeast coast, the island's weather authorities said. They upgraded its status to a strong typhoon, packing gusts of up to 227 kilometers per hour (141 miles per hour) near its center. After crossing the Taiwan Strait, it is likely to hit the southeastern Chinese province of Fujian on Thursday afternoon. "The next 24 hours will present a very severe challenge," Taiwan Premier Cho Jung-tai told a televised meeting of the emergency response center.


In rural Yilan county, where the typhoon will first hit land, wind and rain gathered strength, shutting eateries as most roads emptied out. "This could be the biggest typhoon in recent years," fishing boat captain Hung Chun told Reuters, adding that Yilan's Suao harbor was packed with boats seeking shelter. "It's charging directly toward the east coast and if it makes landfall here, the damage would be enormous."


Work and school were suspended across Taiwan, with streets almost deserted in the capital Taipei. The government said more than 2,000 people had been evacuated from sparsely populated mountain areas at high risk of landslides from the "extremely torrential rain." Almost all domestic flights had been canceled, along with 201 international flights, the Transport Ministry said. All rail operations will stop from midday, with an abbreviated schedule for high-speed links between northern and southern Taiwan that will continue to operate, it added. 


Japanese media said the typhoon also canceled all flights departing from and arriving at Miyako and Ishigaki in Japan's Okinawa prefecture, which lies in the storm's path.


Soldiers standing by

The typhoon is expected to bring rain of up to 1,800 millimeters (70 inches) to some mountainous counties in central and southern Taiwan, weather officials said.


Taiwan's Defense Ministry said it had put 29,000 soldiers on standby for disaster relief efforts. The typhoon has severely curtailed this year's annual Han Kuang war games, but they have not been canceled, with scheduled live fire drills held on the Penghu islands in the Taiwan Strait on Wednesday. Gaemi is expected to bring heavy to very intense rains over vast swathes of China from Thursday, the Water Resources Ministry warned. These are areas between the Pearl River basin in the south and the Songhua and Liao River basins on the northeastern border with Russia and North Korea, it said on Wednesday. The rains are expected to last until July 31, fueled by the typhoon's abundant moisture, it added.



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