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Vietnam is hit by Typhoon Kajiki, which has caused trees to fall and homes to flood.

On Monday, Typhoon Kajiki flooded the north central coast of Vietnam, with torrential rainfall. Despite a slowing down in wind speed, trees were felled and homes flooded.

According to the weather agency, as of 0900 GMT Kajiki was located on the coasts of Nghe An province and Ha Tinh Province, where wind speeds had slowed to 118-133 km/h from a maximum of 166 km/h.

"It is terrifying," said Dang Phuong, 48, a resident of Cua Lo in Nghe An Province, which was directly affected by the storm.

Phuong said, "I could see 2 metre waves when I looked down from the upper floors. The water had flooded the streets around us."

According to reports in the state media, power was cut in Ha Tinh Province in several places. Roofs were also blown off and floating fishing farms were swept away.

Vietnam closed airports and schools earlier, and began mass evacuations in preparation for the strongest storm this year.

Kajiki will bring heavy rains and flooding, the government said.

Vietnam's long coastline, which faces the South China Sea is susceptible to violent storms. These can be deadly and cause dangerous flooding and mudslides.

Weather agency says rain could reach 500 millimetres in some parts of north Vietnam from Monday afternoon to Tuesday evening.

On Monday, the Vietnamese government announced that 30,000 people were evacuated from coastal regions. More than 16500 soldiers and 107,500 paramilitary staff were mobilised to assist with the evacuation as well as standby for search and recovery.

According to the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam, two airports were closed in Thanh Hoa province and Quang Binh. Vietnam Airlines and Vietjet canceled dozens of flights into and out of the area Sunday and Monday.

Kajiki, which is currently moving towards Vietnam from China's Hainan Island, skirted around the southern coast on Sunday and forced Sanya City to close its businesses and shut down public transport.

Hainan, China's most southern province, downgraded their typhoon alerts and emergency response alerts Monday morning. However they warned that heavy rains and isolated storms could occur in southern Hainan cities.

Local media reported on Sunday night that many residents of Sanya, an extremely popular resort, took shelter in underground garages from the storm. Reports said that some large trees had been brought down, leaving the roads littered with broken branches on Monday morning.

China's Transport Ministry urged local authorities to be vigilant against secondary disasters and risks after the National Forecaster warned of typhoon impact on a wide part of the nation until early Tuesday.

The warning extends to all of China's provinces, including the northeastern ones such as Heilongjiang, Jilin and Yunnan which are near the Koreas.

The Chinese Embassy in Hanoi reminded Chinese nationals in Vietnam on Monday to be prepared for heavy rain and strong winds by being aware of their prevention.

(source: Reuters)