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๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ผ Taiwan /Disasters & Emergencies

Typhoon Bawei Approaches: Executive Yuan Focuses on Disaster Relief Preparations

From Liberty Times · () Chinese

Translated from Chinese, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.

At a glance

News Sources not specified Ongoing story
  • Typhoon Bawei is approaching Taiwan, with the Central Weather Administration predicting its most significant impact on July 10th and 11th.
  • The Executive Yuan has confirmed that rescue personnel, vehicles, and equipment are on standby, and preparations have been made for 173 areas prone to becoming isolated.
  • Authorities are closely monitoring the typhoon's path and implementing measures to ensure public safety and maintain transportation security.

Typhoon Bawei is rapidly approaching Taiwan, prompting the Executive Yuan to focus on disaster relief preparations and response. The Central Weather Administration forecasts that the typhoon will have its most substantial impact on July 10th and 11th.

Premier Cho Jung-tai announced that rescue teams, including personnel, vehicles, boats, and helicopters, are on standby. Preparations have been completed for 173 locations identified as vulnerable to becoming isolated due to the storm. These preparations include provisions for supplies, communication, and shelter for residents.

The Ministry of Transportation reported to the Executive Yuan that it is continuously monitoring the latest typhoon intelligence. The ministry has instructed its affiliated agencies to rigorously implement all anti-typhoon preparedness measures and transportation response plans to safeguard public life, property, and traffic safety.

The Central Weather Administration's briefing indicated that a sea typhoon warning is expected on the afternoon of July 9th, followed by a land and sea warning on the morning of July 10th. The most severe conditions, including wind gusts exceeding level 12 in northern Taiwan, Yilan, and Matsu, and heavy rainfall in mountainous areas north of Taichung, are anticipated from the evening of July 10th to July 11th. Coastal areas in central and northern Taiwan, the east coast, southern Hengchun Peninsula, Penghu, and Matsu could experience waves exceeding 6 meters.

Additionally, the Ministry of the Interior reported that disaster response teams are closely monitoring potential dam failures at the Maotao Creek and Wanli Creek in Hualien. The Forestry and Nature Conservation Agency has stationed personnel at the Central Disaster Response Center since July 8th to coordinate with the Hualien County Government. For safety reasons, evacuation and sheltering operations for residents near the Wanli Creek were initiated on July 9th in collaboration with county authorities.

DistantNews Editorial

Originally published by Liberty Times in Chinese. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.