The Prague Post - Deadly Typhoon Kalmaegi ravages Vietnam, Philippines

EUR -
AED 4.235723
AFN 76.58665
ALL 96.607931
AMD 441.138466
ANG 2.064499
AOA 1057.634002
ARS 1673.262842
AUD 1.779867
AWG 2.08182
AZN 1.961887
BAM 1.954966
BBD 2.31929
BDT 140.540019
BGN 1.955526
BHD 0.43482
BIF 3397.220654
BMD 1.153363
BND 1.502446
BOB 7.966961
BRL 6.171414
BSD 1.151499
BTN 102.140246
BWP 15.493253
BYN 3.924491
BYR 22605.910084
BZD 2.315892
CAD 1.628888
CDF 2479.730113
CHF 0.931646
CLF 0.027739
CLP 1088.195943
CNY 8.211194
CNH 8.219244
COP 4364.555354
CRC 578.74798
CUC 1.153363
CUP 30.564113
CVE 110.549615
CZK 24.347718
DJF 205.050709
DKK 7.466992
DOP 74.087738
DZD 150.479884
EGP 54.550488
ERN 17.300441
ETB 176.801011
FJD 2.637567
FKP 0.883942
GBP 0.879306
GEL 3.119813
GGP 0.883942
GHS 12.62356
GIP 0.883942
GMD 84.195729
GNF 9995.647319
GTQ 8.835682
GYD 241.229731
HKD 8.966992
HNL 30.277815
HRK 7.533652
HTG 150.693073
HUF 386.333276
IDR 19257.005976
ILS 3.76521
IMP 0.883942
INR 102.311927
IQD 1510.905215
IRR 48556.572401
ISK 146.199944
JEP 0.883942
JMD 184.709567
JOD 0.817742
JPY 176.939688
KES 149.011542
KGS 100.861279
KHR 4642.285208
KMF 485.565814
KPW 1038.064871
KRW 1679.985204
KWD 0.354078
KYD 0.959682
KZT 606.026101
LAK 25022.205386
LBP 103283.635139
LKR 351.157086
LRD 211.353431
LSL 20.079812
LTL 3.405581
LVL 0.697658
LYD 6.307785
MAD 10.765516
MDL 19.713416
MGA 5192.738782
MKD 61.503751
MMK 2420.959863
MNT 4134.841484
MOP 9.220685
MRU 46.071538
MUR 52.95055
MVR 17.767575
MWK 1996.730509
MXN 21.406257
MYR 4.818177
MZN 73.757811
NAD 20.080302
NGN 1657.555366
NIO 42.371549
NOK 11.773083
NPR 163.210929
NZD 2.053285
OMR 0.44346
PAB 1.153108
PEN 3.896924
PGK 4.928854
PHP 68.164937
PKR 323.922463
PLN 4.24975
PYG 8157.447777
QAR 4.198818
RON 5.085752
RSD 117.215362
RUB 93.711905
RWF 1672.376001
SAR 4.325779
SBD 9.492858
SCR 17.140143
SDG 692.594239
SEK 11.049083
SGD 1.504342
SHP 0.865321
SLE 26.754689
SLL 24185.439841
SOS 658.11342
SRD 44.408507
STD 23872.28049
STN 24.489336
SVC 10.075612
SYP 12752.611465
SZL 19.995293
THB 37.349925
TJS 10.642399
TMT 4.048303
TND 3.403
TOP 2.701295
TRY 48.66453
TTD 7.802602
TWD 35.721722
TZS 2840.163376
UAH 48.4546
UGX 4026.50073
USD 1.153363
UYU 45.919924
UZS 13784.117114
VES 263.190506
VND 30344.9742
VUV 140.90569
WST 3.256266
XAF 655.671483
XAG 0.023781
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.11702
XCG 2.075296
XDR 0.815445
XOF 655.671483
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.079359
ZAR 20.043024
ZMK 10381.646399
ZMW 26.052655
ZWL 371.382338
  • RIO

    0.2100

    69.27

    +0.3%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    15.76

    -1.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.78

    -0.21%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.75

    -0.15%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    54.21

    +0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.01

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    70.73

    -0.92%

  • NGG

    0.9200

    76.29

    +1.21%

  • GSK

    0.4100

    47.1

    +0.87%

  • BCE

    0.7800

    23.17

    +3.37%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • AZN

    2.6200

    83.77

    +3.13%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    11.34

    +0.62%

  • BP

    0.1400

    35.82

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    14.8

    -2.03%

  • RELX

    -1.1900

    43.39

    -2.74%

Deadly Typhoon Kalmaegi ravages Vietnam, Philippines
Deadly Typhoon Kalmaegi ravages Vietnam, Philippines / Photo: Nhac NGUYEN - AFP

Deadly Typhoon Kalmaegi ravages Vietnam, Philippines

Typhoon Kalmaegi churned across Vietnam early Friday, claiming five more lives after its devastating passage through the Philippines where the death toll rose to 188.

Text size:

Kalmaegi had unleashed record rains and flooding in central Philippines this week, sweeping away cars, trucks and shipping containers before lashing Vietnam late Thursday.

"The roof (second floor) of my house was just blown away," said Nguyen Van Tam, 42-year-old fisherman in Vietnam's Gia Lai province, where the storm made landfall packing sustained winds of up to 149 kilometres (92 miles) per hour, according to the environment ministry.

"We were all safe, (but) the typhoon was really terrible, so many trees fallen," he said, adding that his boat had survived intact.

Vietnamese authorities were still assessing the damage on Friday morning, but the environment ministry reported five dead, and 57 houses collapsed in Gia Lai and neighbouring Dak Lak.

Nearly 3,000 more had their roofs blown off or were damaged, it said, while 11 boats or ships sank.

In the streets along Gia Lai's Quy Nhon beach, AFP journalists saw rescue workers and soldiers working with residents to clear uprooted trees, remove debris and collect sheet-metal roofs blown away in the night.

"This was a very big typhoon that hit us," Tran Ngo An, 64, told AFP.

"This was the second time I witnessed such a typhoon. The other one was ten years ago or so, but not that strong as compared to this."

The state power company said 1.6 million clients lost power as the typhoon smashed the central coast, but service to a third of them had been restored by Friday morning.

The fast-moving storm had already churned inland by morning with significantly weakened winds, but heavy rain was still forecast for much of the central coast, the national weather bureau said.

Vietnam is in one of the most active tropical cyclone regions on Earth and is typically affected by 10 typhoons or storms a year, but Kalmaegi was the 13th of 2025.

Scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful due to human-driven climate change. Warmer oceans allow typhoons to strengthen rapidly, and a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, meaning heavier rainfall.

- Relentless rains -

Kalmaegi had battered the islands of Cebu and Negros in the Philippines before swooping back out to sea.

Floodwaters described as unprecedented rushed through the hardest hit Cebu province's towns and cities, where the hunt for missing people continues.

Philippines authorities raised the death toll to 188 on Thursday, with 135 still missing.

The typhoon hit central Vietnam as it was still reeling from more than a week of flooding and record rains that killed at least 47 people and submerged centuries-old historic sites.

The heavy rains starting in late October had drenched the former imperial capital Hue and the ancient town of Hoi An, both UNESCO-listed sites, turning streets into canals and flooding tens of thousands of homes.

Up to 1.7 metres (5 feet 6 inches) fell over one 24-hour period in a downpour breaking national records.

With more than 3,200 kilometres of coastline and a network of 2,300 rivers, Vietnam faces a high risk of flooding.

Before Kalmaegi, natural disasters had already left 279 people dead or missing this year and caused more than $2 billion in damage, according to Vietnam's national statistics office.

S.Janousek--TPP