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Vietnamese coastal provinces put on alert as Typhoon Wipha approaches

Vietnam's prime minister declared an emergency for coastal provinces due to Typhoon Wipha. He said it could cause flooding or landslides. Airlines cancelled flights in advance of the storm expected to land early on Tuesday. Wipha will complicate the search of people who are still missing following a boat that capsized in Halong Bay, northern Vietnam during a storm on Saturday. More than 30 people were killed.

The national weather agency said that the storm will cross Vietnam's north coast between Quang Ninh Province and Ninh Binh Province. It is expected to bring heavy rains, which could lead to dangerous flooding and mudslides.

On Sunday night, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh issued an urgent warning to the coastal provinces to evacuate flood-prone areas and prepare food and rescue equipment, as well as secure communication infrastructure.

Chinh said that Wipha could cause flash flooding and landslides, especially in mountainous regions. It may also cause floods in urban centers.

Vietnam Airlines and Pacific Airlines, its affiliate, cancelled at least nine domestic flights on Monday. The country's flag-carrier said late Sunday that additional delays and reschedules were expected. Vietjet, a budget airline, cancelled 12 flights on Monday, some of which were to South Korea. Vietnam's long coastline, which faces the South China Sea is susceptible to deadly typhoons. Typhoon Yagi caused damage of $3.3 billion and killed 300 people last year. Wipha, which hit Hong Kong over the weekend and caused trees to fall and scaffolding to be destroyed, forced 200 people into temporary shelters.

(source: Reuters)