China launches emergency measures for Megi

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The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters activated a level III emergency response on Monday for the approaching Typhoon Megi.

A level III emergency response is activated in China for the approaching Typhoon Megi. [Photo: n.cztv.com]

A level III emergency response is activated in China for the approaching Typhoon Megi. [Photo: n.cztv.com]

The headquarters urged local authorities to take precautions and dispatched five work teams to the provinces of Fujian, Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangxi and Hunan to prepare aid and relief.

Typhoon Megi, the 17th typhoon this year, is expected to make landfall in Taiwan Tuesday afternoon and move to the coastal areas of Fujian and Guangdong on Wednesday morning, according to a statement from the headquarters.

The regions in Megi's path have only just been hit by Meranti and Malakas, the 14th and 16th typhoons of this year, making disaster response and relief work more difficult, the statement said.

Malakas and Meranti left 29 people dead and 15 missing in five provincial-level regions as of Sept. 19 morning, official data show.

As of 8 p.m. Monday, the center of the typhoon was about 440 kilometers southeast of Taitung in Taiwan in the Pacific Ocean, packing winds of up to 45 meters per second, the National Meteorological Center (NMC) said.

Megi will head northwest at 20 kilometers per hour, bringing wind and rain to the southeastern coast from Monday evening to Tuesday evening, according to the NMC, which renewed a yellow alert for the typhoon.

In China's four-tier severe weather warning system, red is the most serious alert, followed by orange, yellow and blue.

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