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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Phuong Nguyen

Vietnam tackles typhoon's tragic aftermath as new storm threatens region

A man carries a pig saved from a landslides in Nam Tra My district, Quang Nam province, Vietnam October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Thanh Hue

Rescue teams in central Vietnam searched for bodies on Friday following a series of deadly landslides triggered by Typhoon Molave, as yet another powerful storm edged slowly towards a country battered by its most intense weather in years.

Helicopters, soldiers and search dogs have been deployed to look for dozens of people feared dead in at least seven mudslides in central provinces deluged throughout October and suffering the worst spell of flooding in two decades.

Rescuers and residents search for people who were missing after the landslide in Nam Tra My district, Quang Nam province, Vietnam October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Thanh Hue NO RESALES NO ARCHIVES

In Quang Nam province, a district called Nam Tra My was struck by three landslides which killed 16 and injured dozens. Fifteen people were still missing.

"All I can do is stand here and wait," said Ho Van Tung, watching with his neighbours in silent despair as rescue workers clawed through the thick, umber mud searching for bodies.

"I'm waiting to see if they find any of the bodies," said Tung, whose brother-in-law was still buried somewhere below.

A boy is comforted by a relative after losing his father in a landslides, in Nam Tra My district, Quang Nam province, Vietnam October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Thanh Hue

"If they do, I'll rush over there to see if it's a loved one".

Molave has killed close to 40 people since it arrived in Vietnam two days ago, although many people were rescued on Thursday, including three fishermen found in the sea by a cargo vessel and 33 people pulled from a tiny village in Nam Tra My.

Central Vietnam has had a tough year, with its tourism industry crippled by the coronavirus pandemic long before the arrival of typhoons that have killed at least 160 people, left dozens missing, wiped out crops and forced hundreds of thousands into shelters.

A makeshift grave for landslide victims is seen in Nam Tra My district, Quang Nam province, Vietnam October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Thanh Hue

Meanwhile, a another storm, Goni gathered strength as it moved towards the Philippines, where it could make landfall on Sunday packing winds as strong as 195 kilometres (121 miles) per hour, its weather agency PSGASA said.

Molave killed 22 people in the Philippines.

Goni is on course to reach central Vietnam later next week and would be the country's 10th typhoon this year.

"My house is covered in deep mud and debris but I have no plan to clean it up as I heard more storms are coming," Nguyen Thi Sinh, a resident of Quang Tri province, said by phone.

"No one had foreseen such severe flooding. Crops and livestock are all gone with the flood water. We have to encourage ourselves with the fact we are at least still alive," Sinh added.

(Reporting by Phuong Nguyen; Additional reporting by Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Karen Lema in Manila; Writing by James Pearson; Editing by Martin Petty)

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