Wed, Dec 17, 2025 | Jumada al-Thani 26, 1447 | Fajr 05:35 | DXB
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Officials there said another 135 people remained missing and 96 had been injured

Coastal areas in Vietnam were assessing the damage from Typhoon Kalmaegi's destructive winds and heavy rain on Friday, with one death reported by state media, following its deadly passage through the Philippines where it killed at least 188 people.
The storm made landfall in central Vietnam late on Thursday, uprooting trees, damaging homes, and triggering power outages, before weakening as it moved inland. Authorities warned of continuing heavy rainfall of up to 200 millimetres (8 inches) in central provinces from Thanh Hoa to Quang Tri.
In Vietnam, no official casualty figures had been released but state-run Vietnam News Agency reported one fatality in Dak Lak province in a collapsed house. Photos and videos on social media showed ripped-off roofs, flooded homes, and streets littered with fallen trees and debris. Stay up to date with the latest news. Follow KT on WhatsApp Channels.
As the storm's death toll climbed in the Philippines, officials there said another 135 people remained missing and 96 had been injured.
The government said it had mobilised over 268,000 soldiers for search-and-rescue operations and warned of potential floods in low-lying areas, which could affect agriculture in the Central Highlands, Vietnam's main coffee-growing region.
Kalmaegi is the 13th typhoon to form in the South China Sea this year. Vietnam and the Philippines are highly vulnerable to tropical storms and typhoons due to their locations along the Pacific typhoon belt, regularly experiencing damage and casualties during peak storm seasons.
The Philippines' civil aviation regulator has placed all area centers and airport operations under heightened alert in preparation for another typhoon that is expected to affect parts of the country this weekend.