World

Vietnam braces for Typhoon Vamco, at least 67 dead in the Philippines

Vietnam was bracing for Typhoon Vamco to make landfall in the country's central coast early on Sunday, as the death toll in the Philippines rose to at least 67 from that country's deadliest storm this year.

Some 468,000 ordered to be ready for evacuation from Central Vietnam

A coast guard officer speaks on a megaphone at a fishing boat shelter in Quang Binh province, Vietnam, on Saturday. Vietnam has ordered some 460,000 people to be ready for evacuation ahead of Typhoon Vamco reaching the country's central coast. (Nguyen Duc Tho/VNA via AP)

Vietnam was bracing for Typhoon Vamco to make landfall in the country's central coast early on Sunday, as the death toll in the Philippines rose to 67 from that country's deadliest storm this year.

Packing winds of up to 165 km/h, Vamco is forecast to hit a swathe of Vietnam's coast from Ha Tinh to Quang Ngai province, the government's weather agency said on Saturday.

"This is a very strong typhoon," Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said, warning provinces in Vamco's projected path to prepare for its impact.

The provinces plan to evacuate 468,000 people by the end of Saturday, state media cited the government's disaster management authority as saying.

Vietnam is prone to destructive storms and flooding due to its long coastline. Vamco will be the 13th storm that affects the Southeast Asian country this year, where more than 160 people have been killed in natural disasters triggered by a series of storms since early October.

"There has been no respite for more than eight million people living in central Vietnam," said Nguyen Thi Xuan Thu, Vietnam Red Cross Society President. "Each time they start rebuilding their lives and livelihoods, they are pummeled by yet another storm."

In the Philippines, coast guard and disaster agencies scrambled on Saturday to rescue thousands in a northern province after the 21st cyclone to hit the Philippines this year tore through the main island of Luzon late on Wednesday and early Thursday.

Vamco has killed at least 67 people, with 12 people still missing, the Philippines' national disaster management agency said on Sunday.