Thousands without power after Typhoon Haikui batters Taiwan

Taiwan worked to restore power to more than 30,000 households after Typhoon Haikui barrelled into the east and south of the island, as cities and counties in the affected areas closed schools and businesses and domestic airlines cancelled flights. Haikui made landfall in the mountainous and sparsely populated far southeast of Taiwan on Sunday afternoon, the first typhoon to directly hit Taiwan in four years. It then moved across the southern part of the island. State-run utility Taipower said Haikui knocked out power for more than 240,000 households but that fewer than 34,000 were still waiting for electricity to be restored as of Monday, around half of those in the eastern county of Taitung. Counties and cities across southern, eastern and central Taiwan cancelled classes and declared a day off for workers on Monday. In capital city Taipei there were sporadic gusty rain showers. Taiwan airlines cancelled 189 domestic flights on Monday, with only a handful scheduled to fly, while ferry services to surrounding islands were also suspended. There was less disruption to international flights, with only 23 cancelled, the Civil Aeronautics Administration said. Haikui is much weaker than Typhoon Saola, which hit Hong Kong and the southern Chinese province of Guangdong on Saturday.<br/>
Reuters
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/thousands-without-power-after-typhoon-haikui-batters-taiwan-2023-09-04/
9/4/23