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Typhoon Soudelor hits Taiwan, killing at least 6

Typhoon Soudelor is blamed for at least six deaths in Taiwan, where high winds have brought down trees and power lines, leaving more than 3 million households without electricity.

As storm approaches southeast China, authorities order evacuation of over 150,000

Typhoon Soudelor is lashing Taiwan, downing trees, traffic lights and power lines, and leaving at least six people dead, four missing and dozens injured.

Behind fallen trees, a man braves the strong winds from Typhoon Soudelor with his bicycle in Taipei on Saturday. (Wally Santana/The Associated Press)

The typhoon brought strong winds and heavy rainfall as it made landfall early Saturday and is expected to move into the Taiwan Strait and onto mainland China later in the day.

Typhoon Soudelor lashed Taiwan on Saturday, downing trees, traffic lights and power lines. The storm was expected to move into the Taiwan Strait and onto mainland China later in the day.

A total of 27 people have been injured and almost three million households were without electricity as the powerful storm left streets strewn with fallen trees, the government's Central News Agency reported.

An eight-year-girl and her mother died when they were swept out to sea Thursday from a beach on the east coast, the agency said. The girl's twin sister remains missing.

Other casualties included a firefighter who was killed and another injured after being hit by a drunken driver as they attempted to move a fallen tree in the island's south, the news agency said.

The centre of the storm made landfall in eastern Taiwan at 4:40 a.m. Saturday.

Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau said that by mid-morning Saturday, it was packing maximum sustained winds of 162 kilometres per hour and was moving at a speed of 19 km/h in a northwesterly direction in Yunlin county on the west coast. It warned that mountain areas should be on alert for landslides and low-lying areas for flooding.

Authorities in southeast China ordered the evacuation of about 158,000 people and ships back to port ahead of the typhoon, which was expected to hit Fujian province on Saturday night.

On Friday afternoon, marine police rescued 55 university students and teachers trapped on a small island where they had been attending a summer camp, after strong gales stopped ferry services, China's official Xinhua News Agency reported.