August 30, 2012
AAP
AAP
A TYPHOON barrelling towards South Korea has forced rescuers to
suspend the search for seven missing crew members of two Chinese fishing
boats wrecked in a previous gale.
Typhoon Bolaven – the strongest to hit the country for almost a decade – left a trail of death and damage this week.
A fresh typhoon alert was raised early on Thursday over the Yellow
Sea off the west coast as Typhoon Tembin was 200 kilometres southwest of
the southern island of Jeju and moving north at a speed of 41km/h.
Flights were grounded at Jeju airport, schools were closed or their
class hours adjusted and scores of sea ferry routes were shut down.
Packing winds of up to 112km/h, Tembin was expected to make landfall
around 0600 GMT (1600 AEST) on Thursday at the southern port of Gunsan,
bringing up to 150 millimetres of rain, the weather service said.
Bolaven drove two Chinese fishing ships aground early on Tuesday off
the southern coast of Jeju. Rescuers pulled a total of 12 people to
safety, and six swam ashore.
Eight bodies had been recovered, bringing the confirmed death toll,
including South Koreans killed elsewhere due to the storm, to 18. Seven
crew members from the two Chinese boats were still missing.
“We suspended the search operation this morning due to high waves. We
will resume it later today,” local coastguard spokesman Ko Chang-Keon
told AFP.
Bolaven moved on to North Korea, damaging crops and toppling some
3,700 roadside trees, the North’s official Korean Central News Agency
said. Human casualties were not reported.
It crossed the Yalu border river into China early on Wednesday.
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