VOV donates nearly 500 million VND to support people affected by storms and floods.
The Voice of Vietnam Radio has donated nearly 500 million VND to people affected by storms and floods through the Central Committee of the Vietnam Fatherland Front.
The Voice of Vietnam Radio has donated nearly 500 million VND to people affected by storms and floods through the Central Committee of the Vietnam Fatherland Front.

The receding floodwaters left behind over 100.000 cubic meters of yellow sand in Lang Chut village (Van Ban commune, Lao Cai province). Local authorities are coordinating with relevant departments and agencies to develop a plan for auctioning it off.

A bizarre accident occurred in Kim Lien commune (Nghe An province), resulting in the death of the former Chairman of the commune's People's Committee after he became entangled in a cable that had sagged after a storm.
Businesses along the Red River embankment are facing hardship as they have to flee floods twice in just one month, and it is estimated that it will take them two months to clean up and welcome customers back.

Many villas worth tens of billions of VND in the Hoa Tien Xuan Thanh resort area were destroyed by waves after Typhoon Bualoi (Typhoon No. 10). The Ha Tinh Department of Construction is investigating and clarifying the situation.

The Vietnam Road Administration has requested that toll stations under BOT projects and expressways temporarily waive road usage fees for vehicles carrying relief supplies.

By 5 PM on October 6th, individuals, units, and organizations had donated 752,672 billion VND to support people affected by Typhoon No. 10 through the Central Relief Campaign Committee.

Authorities have deployed sniffer dogs to search for the remaining victim in the pickup truck accident that occurred in Pom Khén village, Minh Lương commune (Lao Cai province).

Typhoon No. 10, accompanied by heavy rain, devastated the Mo Vang Ethnic Boarding Junior High School (Lao Cai province), submerging it in mud and causing nearly 3 billion VND in damage.

A storm that hit Thong Thu border commune (Nghe An province) completely destroyed two sturdy houses and ripped off the roofs of many others.

Deputy Prime Minister Tran Hong Ha instructed Lao Cai province not to allow people to find shelter on their own after the storm, but to plan and relocate residents to safe areas, absolutely avoiding dangerous zones.

After Typhoon No. 10, the schoolyards in the mountainous region of Nghe An were covered in a blanket of drying books; under the sun, teachers clung to the knowledge, anxiously and wearily waiting for the day students would return to class.

The Voice of Vietnam Radio is calling on its staff, officials, and employees to support those affected by Typhoon No. 10.

Authorities in Tuyen Quang province have just found two more children in the landslide that buried an entire family of four in Lung Cu commune; one victim is still missing.

In the midst of a torrential downpour in Lao Cai, village head Giang A Rinh risked his life running door-to-door, successfully evacuating 20 households from the risk of landslides.

Typhoon Bualoi (Typhoon No. 10) moved erratically, with fierce gusts of wind, and raged for an extended period, causing flash floods and landslides, leaving unprecedented devastation in many localities.

The Central Committee of the Vietnam Fatherland Front has published 303 pages of statements detailing donations to people affected by Typhoon Bualoi (Typhoon No. 10).

National Highway 32, passing through Khau Pha Pass (Tu Le commune, Lao Cai province), has been temporarily reopened after being cut off for two days due to landslides; motorbikes can now pass through.

Typhoon Matmo is forecast to reach level 12 intensity, with gusts up to level 15, bringing strong winds and heavy rain, posing a direct threat to the northern provinces.

Typhoon No. 10 caused tidal surges, tearing apart the sturdy concrete road used for tourism and erosion control along the Phu Thuan coastline (Thuan An ward, Hue City).

In the early hours of October 3rd, the Tat Luong bridge on provincial road 185 (Tuyen Quang province) unexpectedly collapsed, with abutment M1 breaking, creating a 2-meter-deep sinkhole in the middle of the night.

The Prime Minister, along with leaders, officials, civil servants, and employees of the Government Office, are donating at least one day's salary each to those affected by the storms and floods.

After several days of being missing, authorities found the wrecked pickup truck and two victims buried under rocks and soil on National Highway 279 in Minh Luong commune, Lao Cai province.

Typhoon Bualoi devastated many provinces in northern and central Vietnam, leaving 65 people dead or missing, and causing preliminary economic losses of 12.799 billion VND in some provinces.

On the afternoon of October 2nd, the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF) held a ceremony to launch a campaign to support people affected by Typhoon Bualoi (Typhoon No. 10).

The pickup truck carrying three men who went missing on September 29th has been found buried under rocks and soil at a landslide site on National Highway 279 in Lao Cai.

Having been hit by two storms in a single month, many schools in Nghe An suffered heavy damage.

The Ministry of National Defence and the Ministry of Public Security have directed their units to prepare forces, supplies, equipment, and vehicles (including helicopters) to support the people in overcoming the consequences of storms and floods.

Floods in Lao Cai have left 10 people dead or missing, damaged thousands of homes, paralyzed infrastructure, and caused total estimated damage exceeding 2.750 trillion VND.

More than 200 officers and soldiers, along with two sniffer dogs, were mobilized and searched throughout the night for four members of a family buried by a landslide in Lung Cu commune, Tuyen Quang province.