Typhoon Imbudo, the first typhoon in the season, made a relatively
uneventful visit to Hong Kong despite the issuing of No. 8 Gale or
Storm Signal.
The No. 8 Signal, which was issued at 10:40 p.m. Wednesday, was
replaced by the Strong Wind Signal No. 3 at 8.15 a.m. Thursday as
the storm moved further away from Hong Kong and headed toward
western Guangdong.
Since the issuing of No. 8 Signal until its cancellation Thursday,
11 people suffered minor injuries, mostly due to falling
objects.
A
total of 83 cases of fallen trees were reported, but no reports of
serious flooding were received.
Apart from a few temporary obstructions caused by fallen trees,
most road networks were generally unaffected by the typhoon.
At
the Hong Kong International Airport, eight arrival and nine
departure flights were delayed, 15 arrival and 21 departure flights
were canceled and two arrival flights diverted.
But the Airport Express and Tung Chung Line rail services have
resumed normal operation. Ferries, buses and trams also resumed
operation gradually.
The Social Welfare Department announced Thursday morning that all
child care centers, elderly services centers and day rehabilitation
units including sheltered workshops and day activity centers
resumed normal operation.
The Judiciary announces that all courts, tribunals, court
registries and offices will open in the afternoon.
The Hong Kong Observatory said Imbudo is gradually edging toward
western Guangdong and is expected to make landfall around this
noon.
It
forecast local winds will weaken during the day and the No. 3
signal will be canceled when strong winds no longer affect Victoria
Harbor.
As
of 9 a.m. Typhoon Imbudo was centered about 280 kilometers
west-southwest of Hong Kong. It is forecast to move northwest at
about 25 kilometers per hour.
The Observatory forecasts It will remain showery on Friday and
Saturday.
Imbudo, which means "funnel" in the Filipino language, killed at
least five people on Tuesday when it tore through the Philippines.
The storm was the strongest to hit the country since 1998.
(People’s Daily July 24, 2003)
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