Typhoon Yagi leaves dozens dead in Vietnam, pounds infrastructure

On Monday, managers and workers at industrial gardens and factories in Haiphong, a southern city of two million, reported that they had no power and were attempting to recover products from rainfall in factories whose metal sheets roof had been completely destroyed.

” Everyone is trying to make sites secure and shares dry,” said Bruno Jaspaert, head of DEEP C industrial districts, which house plants from more than 150 buyers in Haiphong and the neighboring state of Quang Ninh.

The windows of a mill in Haiphong of South Korea’s LG Electronics collapsed, according to photos and a Reuters see.

LG Electronics, a major manufacturer of consumer and product technology, reported no injuries among its people and acknowledged problems at its creation page, noting that a warehouse filled with refrigerators and washing machines had been flooded.

When asked about the typhoon’s effects on Asian factories in southern regions, Hong Sun, the president of the North Korean business partnership in Vietnam, responded,” Lots of problems.”