Monday, May 18, 2026
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Vietnam flood death toll hits 40 as Typhoon Kalmaegi barrels in

HANOI—The death toll from a week of flooding and record rains in central Vietnam rose to 40 on Tuesday, authorities said, as another powerful storm bore down on the battered region.

Vietnam’s central belt has been deluged by torrential rains turning streets into canals, bursting riverbanks and inundating some of the country’s most-visited historic sites.

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Up to 1.7 meters fell over one 24-hour period in a downpour breaking national records.

The fatalities occurred in Hue, Da Nang, Lam Dong and Quang Tri provinces, according to the environment ministry’s disaster management agency, which said six people remained missing.

The onslaught of extreme weather is set to continue, with Typhoon Kalmaegi forecast to make landfall in the early hours of Friday morning, according to the national weather bureau.

Vietnam is prone to heavy rains between June and September, but scientific evidence has identified a pattern of human-driven climate change making extreme weather more frequent and destructive.

Ten typhoons or tropical storms usually affect Vietnam, directly or offshore, in a given year, but Typhoon Kalmaegi is set to be the 13th of 2025.

The storm is currently lashing the Philippines, where it has killed at least five people and displaced hundreds of thousands. AFP

It could hit Vietnam’s coast with winds of up to 166 kilometers per hour per hour as it approaches on Thursday, the national weather bureau said.

On Tuesday, the region was reeling from the past week’s extreme weather — with some remote areas still isolated by road-blocking landslides.

Nearly 80,000 houses remain flooded, according to the disaster agency, while more than 10,000 hectares of crops have been destroyed and more than 68,000 cattle killed.

With Kalmaegi, the Philippines has already reached that average, weather specialist Varilla told AFP, adding at least “three to five more” storms could be expected by December’s end.

Just before midnight in Dinagat Islands province, where Kalmaegi first made landfall, Miriam Vargas sat with her children in the dark, praying as the winds slammed against the walls of her home.

“The electricity went out about an hour ago, and we cannot see anything,” the 34-year-old single mother told AFP.

The Philippines was hit by two major storms in September, including Super Typhoon Ragasa, which tore the roofs off buildings on its way to killing 14 people in nearby Taiwan. AFP

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