TIL Desk/World/Taipei-Taiwan went into shutdown today as the island faces its third typhoon in two weeks, with thousands evacuated, schools and offices closed across the island and hundreds of flights disrupted. Typhoon Megi is expected to make landfall in eastern Taiwan later today but is already bringing widespread violent winds and torrential rain as it nears the island.
More than 5,000 people have been evacuated from their homes and around 2,000 are in shelters, according to the Central Emergency Operation Center. About 36,000 households have lost power due to the typhoon so far. A total of 575 international and domestic flights were cancelled as of today morning, and 109 delayed. Most trains were also halted. Television footage showed powerful waves surging past breakwaters in northeastern Yilan county and outlying Orchid Island.
Ahead of the storm, more than 3,700 tourists had already been evacuated at the weekend from Orchid Island and Green Island — both popular with visitors. At 0030 GMT, Megi was 220 kilometres southeast of the eastern county of Hualien, packing gusts of up to 198 kilometres per hour. It is moving at 18 kilometres an hour — slower than previously forecast — delaying the time of landfall to around 0900 GMT today, according to Taiwan’s weather bureau. Hualien and Taitung, which are also popular with visitors for their coastlines and landscapes, will be in the firing line.