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Typhoon Maemi kills 33 in South Korea
SEOUL (AFP) Sep 13, 2003
Powerful winds and heavy rains wrought devastation across South Korea Saturday as one of the most powerful typhoons to ravage the country for years left at least 33 dead and 14 missing.

Typhoon Maemi crashed into the South Korea's southern provinces before dawn, bringing record-breaking 215 kilometer (135 mile) per hour winds that triggered deadly landslides and floods.

Trains were derailed and ships pulverised by high winds as more than a million households were plunged into darkness. Thousands of people were forced to flee from their homes as the high winds tore through the region.

"It was the most powerful typhoon in terms of wind speed since we began compiling weather records in 1904," said Yoon Seok-hwan, an official at the Korea Metrological Administration.

An unconfirmed report by the YTN television network said 61 people had been killed by Maemi, with 42 others missing.

As the typhoon howled into the southern port of Busan, strong gusts toppled seven giant cranes weighing up to 985 tonnes, KBS television said.

A giant floating oil rig under construction in the southeastern port of Ulsan was swept away by high waves.

It strayed into the nearby Hyundai Mipo shipyard, smashing against a huge semi-constructed petrochemical carrier, a spokesman of Hyundai Mipo told AFP by phone. Both vessels suffered serious damage, he said.

"We may have to rebuild the petrochemical carrier. We need to consult with the owner," he said, adding that the ship was ordered by an unidentified German company.

Five nuclear power plants in southeastern counties of Kori and Wolseong had to halt operations after their power transmission lines were knocked out.

"The problem was with the power transmission system, not with the nuclear power generating system," Shin Bo-Kyun, a spokesman for the state utility's atomic power generating operations, told Yonhap news agency.

In Busan a firefighter lost his leg and four of his colleagues were injured when a construction crane collapsed on a fire truck, reports said.

A 50-year-old man died after he was blown off the terrace of his Busan house and smashed his head on the ground. Two others were electrocuted in separate incidents in Busan when power lines were snapped by gusting winds.

In Jeju, a sailor died after his leg was severed by a rope as he was trying to moor his barge.

An unconfirmed report said some 10 people were trapped in a flooded basement karaoke bar in the southeastern city of Masan with rescuers desperately pumpeing away flood water to reach them.

A train was derailed by a landslide in the central province of North Chungcheong early on Saturday, injuring 28.

Television pictures showed wreckages of crumpled giant cranes, overturned cars submerged in raging muddy waters, wrecked ships and damaged roads, bridges and railways.

Rising waters, landslides and power blackouts, forced some 2,000 people to evacuate in the eastern and southeastern provinces of Gangweon and Gyeongsang and the southern island of Jeju.

Some 1.34 million households in southern Gyeongsang Province suffered from power failure, the Central Anti-Disaster Headquarters said.

Typhoon Maemi, meaning cicada in Korean, swept through the east coast and off into the East Sea (Sea of Japan) early Saturday. It later weakened to a tropical storm, weather authorities said.

One person died and at least 93 people were injured Friday when the storm as ripped through Japan's southern Okinawa islands.

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