Typhoon Soudelor kills nine in China: State media

People look at waves as typhoon Soudelor approaches China, in Taizhou, Zhejiang province, August 8, 2015. Reuters Photos

Typhoon Soudelor killed nine people in eastern China after parts of the country were hit by the heaviest rains in a century, state media reported on August 9.

Another three people are missing after the storm caused landslides in rural parts of eastern Zhejiang province, the official Xinhua news agency reported, citing local disaster relief officials.    

Wencheng county saw downpours of 645 millimetres in 24 hours -- the heaviest rains in 100 years -- after the typhoon made landfall on August 8 night, it said.
 
The storm has caused at least 248 million yuan ($40 million) in economic damage and cut power to more than two million homes, Xinhua said. More than a quarter had electricity restored by August 9 morning.
 
Billed as the biggest typhoon of the year earlier in the week with winds of up to 230 kilometres (140 miles) an hour, Soudelor -- named after a legendary Micronesian chief -- has since weakened.
 
China's National Meteorological Center forecast the typhoon will be downgraded to a tropical depression by Sunday night as it moved further inland.
 
Soudelor left six people dead in Taiwan, where it ripped up trees and triggered landslides, damaging electricity lines and knocking out power to a record four million households.
 
Almost half a million homes were still without power on August 9, Taiwan Power Co. said, as blocked roads hampered efforts to restore supplies in some areas.
 
Taiwan's death toll rose to six after an eight-year-old girl who went missing on August 6 after being swept out to sea with her mother and twin sister was found dead.
 
Her mother and sister, caught in the strong waves on the east coast, were the first victims of the typhoon.
 
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