Super Typhoon Yagi hits Vietnam after casualties in China’s Hainan

A woman riding a motorbike is blown down from the wind of Typhoon Yagi in Vietnam’s Hai Phong city on Sept. 7, 2024. Yagi is currently en route to northern Vietnam over the Gulf of Tonkin. (AFP)
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Updated 07 September 2024
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Super Typhoon Yagi hits Vietnam after casualties in China’s Hainan

  • Yagi, the world’s second-most powerful tropical cyclone in 2024, has already killed at least 16 people in the Philippines
  • It tore through China’s southern island of Hainan where it reportedly killed two people and injured dozens

HANOI/HAIPHONG/BEIJING: Super Typhoon Yagi, Asia’s most powerful storm this year, made landfall in northern Vietnam on Saturday, the meteorological agency said, after tearing through China’s southern island of Hainan where it reportedly killed two people and injured dozens.

Yagi, the world’s second-most powerful tropical cyclone in 2024, has already killed at least 16 people in the Philippines, having formed east of the archipelago earlier in the week.

As it hit island districts of north Vietnam around 1300 local time (0600 GMT) on Saturday, it generated winds of up to 160 kph (99 mph) near its center, having lost power from its peak of 234 kph (145 mph) in Hainan a day earlier.

Vietnam’s coastal city of Haiphong, an industrial hub with a population of 2 million that hosts factories from foreign multinationals and local carmaker VinFast, is so far among the hardest hit by the winds.

Parts of the city experienced power outages on Saturday, authorities said.

The wind smashed buildings’ glass windows and broke tree branches, according to a Reuters witness. City streets were deserted as citizens heeded authorities’ calls to stay indoors.

Earlier in Hainan, which has a population of more than 10 million, the storm knocked down trees, flooded roads and cut power to more than 800,000 homes.

AIRPORTS CLOSED

Vietnam evacuated nearly 50,000 people from coastal towns and deployed 450,000 military personnel, the government said.

It also suspended operations for several hours at four airports on Saturday, including Hanoi’s Noi Bai, the busiest in the north, canceling more than 300 flights.

High schools were also closed in 12 northern provinces, including in the capital Hanoi.

Typhoons are becoming stronger, fueled by warmer oceans, amid climate change, scientists say. Last week, Typhoon Shanshan slammed into southwestern Japan, the strongest storm to hit the country in decades.

Yagi is named after the Japanese word for goat and the constellation of Capricornus.


Japan PM’s big election win could mean more beef with Beijing

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Japan PM’s big election win could mean more beef with Beijing

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s thumping election win has blunted domestic opposition to her hawkish security agenda, encouraging plans to press ahead with a defense expansion that China has condemned as a return ​to militarism. As the scale of her government’s historic victory became clear on Sunday — capturing 352 of the 465 seats in the lower house — Takaichi said she would “work flat out to deliver” an agenda that includes building a military strong enough to deter Chinese threats to its islands, including those close to Taiwan. In November, Takaichi touched off a diplomatic storm with Beijing by suggesting Japan could respond militarily to any Chinese attack on the democratically governed island if it also threatened Japanese territory.

STANDING UP TO CHINA
“I expect to see Japan very forward-leaning on defense policy, such as her statements on a Taiwan contingency,” said Kevin Maher, a former US diplomat now with NMV Consulting in Washington. “One impact could be that President Xi Jinping comes to ‌understand her strong ‌stance,” he added.
China
responded furiously
to Takaichi’s Taiwan comment, promising to “resolutely prevent the resurgence of ‌Japanese ⁠militarism” ​if Tokyo continued ‌on its “wrong path.” Beijing also imposed a series of economic countermeasures including a boycott on travel to Japan and export restrictions on items such as rare earths it says Tokyo could use in military equipment.
Shingo Yamagami, a senior fellow at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation and a former Japanese ambassador to Australia, said the “hidden agenda” of the Sunday election was China.
“In light of belligerent actions and waves of economic coercion, should Japan acquiesce or stand tall?” he wrote on X. “The Japanese people clearly chose the latter.”
Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to Japan, Lee Yi-yang, was among the first foreign dignitaries to congratulate Takaichi, writing on Facebook that her victory showed ⁠Japan was not intimidated by China’s “threats and pressure.”
China’s foreign ministry on Monday again
urged Takaichi
to withdraw her remarks on Taiwan and said its policy toward Japan would not ‌be changed by one election.
“We urge Japan’s ruling authorities to take ‍seriously, rather than ignore, the concerns of the international community, and ‍to pursue the path of peaceful development instead of repeating the mistakes of militarism,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said.

SECURITY ‍STRATEGY Takaichi, a fan of Britain’s former leader Margaret Thatcher, is already accelerating defense spending to bring it to a record 2 percent of gross domestic product by the end of March. She has also pledged to ease restrictions on arms exports and allow Japan to pursue joint defense equipment projects with other countries.
Her administration plans to formulate a new national security strategy, likely by year end, that would further accelerate ​military spending.
That could lift defense outlays to around 3 percent of GDP, an LDP lawmaker told Reuters ahead of Sunday’s election, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity surrounding such a move.
The potential ⁠increase would follow pressure from US President Donald Trump on Washington’s allies to raise defense spending.
Drawing lessons from nearly four years of war in Ukraine, Japan wants to build up munitions stockpiles and buy new equipment, including drones, to prepare for any prolonged conflict against a more powerful adversary, analysts say. The scale of Takaichi’s security ambitions could, however, be constrained by tax cuts and economic stimulus measures that would strain public finances, said Jeffrey Hornung, an expert on Japanese security policy at the RAND Corporation.
“Maybe you’ll see an effort to spend more, but because of her plans to spend on consumer measures, they may not choose to push much further,” he said.
The landslide victory could also bring a long-taboo security goal into view, one that would not burden public finances.
With more than a two-thirds majority in the lower house, she could table an amendment to Japan’s pacifist constitution to formally recognize the Self-Defense Forces as a military. Any such change would still require a two-thirds majority in the upper house — which she does ‌not currently control — and approval in a national referendum.
“It’s not a slam dunk,” Hornung said, “but probably the best chance for any prime minister.”