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More than 260,000 evacuated as Typhoon Bavi brings severe floods

By Thomson Reuters Jul 13, 2026 | 11:00 PM

HONG KONG, July 14 (Reuters) – The most powerful storm to strike mainland China this year forced more than 260,000 people to evacuate ​their homes in northeastern Liaoning province, as ‌Typhoon Bavi brought intense flooding.

Heavy rain is expected to persist through Tuesday, with extreme downpours in some areas, authorities said as Bavi draws vast amounts of tropical moisture ‌northward, ​creating a sustained flow of ⁠humid air into northern ⁠China.

In Shenyang, Liaoning’s provincial capital, a lighthouse severed its high-voltage power line and began drifting through floodwaters along main roads and crossing under a ​bridge, according to videos posted on Chinese social media.

All schools and training institutions have been ⁠ordered to suspend classes, while ⁠transport services have been largely disrupted ​in northeastern cities including in Shenyang and Jilin.

Bavi, covering ​an area the size of France, formed ‌in the Pacific Ocean 13 days ago. Its structure remained largely intact on Monday even after making landfall in eastern China on Saturday night, making ⁠it the longest-lasting tropical cyclone in the Asia-Pacific region this year.

Its longevity is largely due to its unusually ⁠well-preserved warm ‌core, Chinese meteorologists say, allowing Bavi ⁠to retain much of its moisture as ​it ‌churns north towards the Korean peninsula. ​Intense rainfall ⁠is expected when Bavi, currently classified as a tropical storm, slows further and starts to release all the moisture that it has been holding.

(Reporting by the Beijing newsroom; writing by Farah Master; Editing by ​Stephen Coates)