BBC NEWS Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific Chinese Vietnamese Burmese Thai Indonesian
BBCi NEWS   SPORT   WEATHER   WORLD SERVICE   A-Z INDEX     

BBC News World Edition
 You are in: Asia-Pacific  
News Front Page
Africa
Americas
Asia-Pacific
Europe
Middle East
South Asia
UK
Business
Entertainment
Science/Nature
Technology
Health
-------------
Talking Point
-------------
Country Profiles
In Depth
-------------
Programmes
-------------
BBC Sport
BBC Weather
SERVICES
-------------
LANGUAGES
EDITIONS
Tuesday, 3 September, 2002, 10:18 GMT 11:18 UK
Korean typhoon death toll rises
Residents look at cars in mud at Tonghae, east of the capital Seoul
The Rusa typhoon is the worst since 1959
Soldiers in South Korea are continuing efforts to rescue 71 people still missing after the peninsula was battered by its worst typhoon in 40 years.

South Korea's anti-disaster centre said 113 people were confirmed killed after Typhoon Rusa swept through the country over the weekend.


RUSA's WRATH:
  • Winds hit 204kph (127mph)
  • 89 centimetres (35 inches) of rain
  • 20,000 homes flooded
  • 5,100 hectares (12,600 acres) of farmland flooded

  • North Korea has also been hard hit by the typhoon and has delayed Red Cross talks with the South on family reunion visits for several days as a result.

    The North's official KCNA agency said the typhoon has caused the deaths of "scores" of people in the North and has destroyed basic infrastructure over a wide area.

    The death toll in the South is expected to rise further as searches for the missing continue, Kim Jin-young, a director at the National Disaster Prevention Headquarters, has warned.

    Hampered by thick fog, troops have joined the search for survivors in South Korea, using electronic sensors to search for people buried deep in the mud.

    South Korean soldiers are mobilised to help with the massive clean-up operation
    Rusa did enormous damage to the country's infrastructure

    Rescue workers are also attempting to provide evacuees with food and water. At least 16,000 people in remote villages have been cut off by landslides that buried and buckled roads, the National Disaster Prevention Headquarters said.

    The government has designated four cities as disaster zones which means that their residents will qualify for financial help.

    A farmer in the central village of Sangju was detained after he tried to set fire to an official building to protest against slow aid for farmers who lost crops just before harvest.

    But agriculture ministry officials said that while vegetables and fallen fruit were ruined, the main harvest would not necessarily be affected, arguing that flooded rice fields were being drained quickly.

    Unprecedented damage

    Officials are warning that the damage is likely to be the worst in the nation's history - estimated at 1.05 trillion won ($880 million) and rising.

    The southern city of Busan faces the additional problems of having to clear up before the Asian Games, due to begin at the end of September.

    Several sports facilities, including part of a field hockey stadium, were severely damaged, the Associated Press news agency reported.

    Rusa, the Malaysian word for deer, is the most powerful storm to hit the Korean peninsula since Typhoon Sarah in 1959, which left more than 840 dead or missing.

    See also:

    01 Sep 02 | Asia-Pacific
    18 Aug 02 | Asia-Pacific
    14 Jul 02 | Asia-Pacific
    12 Jul 02 | Asia-Pacific
    05 Jul 02 | Asia-Pacific
    04 Jul 02 | Asia-Pacific
    18 Sep 00 | Science/Nature
    Internet links:


    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

    Links to more Asia-Pacific stories are at the foot of the page.


    E-mail this story to a friend

    Links to more Asia-Pacific stories

    © BBC ^^ Back to top

    News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East |
    South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature |
    Technology | Health | Talking Point | Country Profiles | In Depth |
    Programmes