Massive cleanup efforts underway in Vietnam’s typhoon-hit provinces

Widespread destruction includes uprooted trees, damaged signboards and toppled electric poles. Many homes have had their roofs torn off, and local streets remain littered with debris.

Viet Nam News

Viet Nam News

         

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Environmental workers and local residents work together to clean up the streets in Hạ Long City in the coastal province of Quảng Ninh. PHOTO: VNA/VNS/VIET NAM NEWS

September 13, 2024

HANOI – While Typhoon Yagi has passed, but its trail of destruction is still very much visible across northern Việt Nam.

Widespread damages includes uprooted trees, damaged signboards and toppled electric poles. Many homes have had their roofs torn off, and local streets remain littered with debris.

In response, provincial People’s Committees have taken swift action.

They have mobilised all available resources to clear roads, restore electricity and telecommunications and deliver essential supplies to affected residents.

The following photos capture their efforts to restore people’s lives following the typhoon:

Massive cleanup efforts underway in Vietnam’s typhoon-hit provinces

Environmental workers use a crane to replant trees that were uprooted by the typhoon in Hạ Long City. More than 2,000 volunteers have joined the city’s post-disaster clean-up efforts. PHOTO: VNA/VNS/VIET NAM NEWS

Massive cleanup efforts underway in Vietnam’s typhoon-hit provinces

Military units are deployed to clear mud from roads in Yên Bái City in the mountainous province of Yên Bái. PHOTO: VNA/VNS/VIET NAM NEWS

Massive cleanup efforts underway in Vietnam’s typhoon-hit provinces

A group of solders uses hoes to scrape mud off a road in Yên Bái City. PHOTO: VNA/VNS/VIET NAM NEWS

Massive cleanup efforts underway in Vietnam’s typhoon-hit provinces

Lạng Sơn Red Cross members and volunteers deliver essential supplies to affected people in Hữu Lũng District in the mountainous province of Lạng Sơn. PHOTO: VNA/VNS/VIET NAM NEWS

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