Super Typhoon Yagi hits Vietnam after killing two in China

On southwestern China’s Hainan island, the storms struck Vietnam, killing at least two people and injuring 92 people. According to the state broadcaster CCTV, Yagi caused the removal of around 460, 000 people by attacking trees, causing winds of more than 230kmh, and causing the evacuation of trees. Hainan’s majorContinue Reading

Super Typhoon Yagi kills 2, injures 92 in China

After crashing into southern China’s Hainan island on Saturday ( Sep 7 ), Super Typhoon Yagi killed at least two people and injured 92 others, according to state media reports from Beijing. The wind lashed Hainan with big rain and windy breezes, leaving at least two useless and 92 injured,Continue Reading

Seniors on Hong Kong’s outlying islands lack access to medical services

Having CARE OF THE ELDERLY

Residents of Peng Chau, another remote area that is 40 minutes by ferry from the city, also experience a lack of medical care.

Of its almost 6, 000 people, about 1, 000 are older.

Instead of a doctor, residents have four health clinics, including one outpatient center which offers 24-hour second assistance services.

Mr. Jordan Yeng, who co-founded the daycare center Silvermorph Charity, claimed he did it because there was a company distance.

” The aircraft can aid in very serious emergency situations. But in my view, there should be more tools related to providing those long-term treatment, such as childcare areas, such as old houses, or broadening those home base companies, because those are kind of the day-to-day needs”, he said.

His center is also impacted by the same medical labor shortage that plagues the area.

Despite providing a wide range of services including cleaning and meal support, nursing treatment and rehabilitation, the middle only has three full-time team. Mr. Yeng makes up for the lack of workers by employing islands or their families on a freelance base.

Residents of Peng Chau, a program that recruits individuals to assist seniors with everyday tasks, can also benefit from Silvermorph Charity. &nbsp,

” We organise different kinds of activities, including seat dance, stretching, handwriting and drink appreciation”, said project director Derek Tam. &nbsp,

” These activities are great for their physical and mental health- not just exercising, but also building a social circle for them” .&nbsp,

Volunteers visit homes, where they occasionally assist with mild restoration work, despite the fact that the majority of the activities are held at a community center. The program also offers home changes for the old, similar to Silvermorph Charity. &nbsp,

” We help to restore or improve the technology at the elderly’s house, like fixing damaged light flowers, to fluids leaking from the windows. Our participants also assist in installing railings for those in need in bathrooms, according to Mr. Tam.

Although these may seem like small alterations, the elderly’s lives are significantly improved by them.

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China halts foreign adoptions of its children

Beijing: The Chinese government announced on Thursday ( Sep. 5 ) that it will no longer permit foreigners to adopt its children. According to foreign government spokesman Mao Ning, the only exceptions will be for blood friends who adopt children or stepchildren. The Taiwanese government has modified its adoption policyContinue Reading

Super Typhoon Yagi drenches southern China ahead of landfall

As one of the strongest storms to hit Asia this year and heading for ashore along Hainan’s tropical beach, strong winds and heavy rainfall from Super Typhoon Yagi drained southwestern China on Friday ( Sep 6), forcing schools to close for a second time and cancelling flights.

Packing maximum sustained winds of 245kmh near its attention, Yagi files as the country’s second-most strong tropical storm in 2024 so much, after the Category 5 Atlantic storms Beryl.

Yagi is expected to make land along China’s beach from Wenchang in Hainan to Leizhou, Guangdong on Friday evening, more than double its durability since it earlier this year destroyed the northern Philippines.

Immediately and on Friday night, the area experienced strong thunder and lightning and wind throughout the region.

On Friday, some flights in Hainan, Guangdong, Hong Kong, and Macao were canceled, with the majority of southern China’s transportation links being closed. The country’s longest ocean crossing, the major bridge linking Hong Kong with Macao and Zhuhai in Guangdong, was likewise closed.

The stock exchange was shut down while universities remained shut in Hong Kong’s financial hub.

The storms 8 signal, the next highest, would be in place until at least 12pm on Friday, Hong Kong’s observatory said, meaning some businesses may be opened and transport will be drastically reduced.

Residents are being advised to stay away from the shoreline by the statement,” Intense rainbands associated with Yagi will bring heavy squally showers to the territory”.

According to the official news agency Xinhua, China’s government sent task forces to Guangdong and Hainan to provide advice on preventing floods and typhoons.

Super Typhoon Yagi’s projected landfall in Hainan is uncommon, as the majority of typhoons landing on the duty-free island are categorized as weak. From 1949 to 2023, 106 typhoons landed in Hainan but only nine were classified as super typhoons.

Typhoons are becoming stronger, fuelled by warmer oceans, amid climate change, scientists say. Typhoon Shanshan slammed into southwest Japan last week, making it the strongest storm to hit the nation in decades.

Yagi, which strengthened into a super typhoon on Wednesday night, is the Japanese word for goat and for the constellation of Capricornus, a mythical creature that is half goat, half fish.

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As thousands of languages threaten to vanish globally, Japan and South Korea look to preserve their dying ones

HOKKAIDO / JEJU: The tag of being Ainu haunted Miyuki Muraki throughout her youth.

” Since I was a kid, I was called Ainu and bullied”, the 64-year-old said. ” Because of that, there was a time when I hated the word ‘ Ainu'”.

The racial group, who were the first to settle in northeastern Japan and are indigenous to the land of northern Japan, have been suppressed for years. In the late 19th century, the Meiji state outlawed their customs and traditions.

While Japan is currently investing millions of dollars to help the Ainu people and their society, some people like Muraki are still afraid of prejudice, leading to them to completely prevent speaking the Ainu vocabulary.

Her work, the National Ainu Museum and Park – also called Upopoy, an Ainu word for “let’s sing” – has been trying to revive the dying speech, which has been designated as thoroughly endangered by UNESCO.

However, nearly 2, 000km aside, South Korea’s largest isle of Jeju is also attempting to reverse the decline of its language.

The Jeju-eo speech, which was once a fundamental component of the geological region’s identity, was also designated as critically endangered in 2010 and has largely been replaced with common Korean.

However, common interest is assisting in a renaissance of sorts. Jeju-eo has even found an unlikely alliance in social media, where it is gaining a growing following.

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Southern China braces for super typhoon Yagi

In preparation for its anticipated land along Hainan’s exotic coast, super typhoon Yagi is expected to make its way to China’s southern provinces and cities, shutting down schools and putting off travel. Its storm is expected to make its biggest storm to hit the area in nearly a decade. YagiContinue Reading