• A Filipino crew member believed to be onboard 'Gulf Livestock 1' is rescued by a Japanese coastguard team to the west of Amami Oshima island in south-west Japan. Reuters
    A Filipino crew member believed to be onboard 'Gulf Livestock 1' is rescued by a Japanese coastguard team to the west of Amami Oshima island in south-west Japan. Reuters
  • People look at an electric pole knocked down by Typhoon Maysak in the port of Ulsan. AFP
    People look at an electric pole knocked down by Typhoon Maysak in the port of Ulsan. AFP
  • A dinosaur sculpture is damaged by Typhoon Maysak in Ulsan. AFP
    A dinosaur sculpture is damaged by Typhoon Maysak in Ulsan. AFP
  • Windows and air conditioning units damaged by Typhoon Maysak at an apartment near Gwangalli beach in Busan. AFP
    Windows and air conditioning units damaged by Typhoon Maysak at an apartment near Gwangalli beach in Busan. AFP
  • A man looks at a house damaged by Typhoon Maysak in Ulsan. AFP
    A man looks at a house damaged by Typhoon Maysak in Ulsan. AFP
  • A buoy un-tethered during heavy swell brought by Typhoon Maysak on Haeundae beach in Busan. AFP
    A buoy un-tethered during heavy swell brought by Typhoon Maysak on Haeundae beach in Busan. AFP
  • Asubmerged street in the aftermath of Typhoon Maysak in Gangneung, South Korea. Reuters
    Asubmerged street in the aftermath of Typhoon Maysak in Gangneung, South Korea. Reuters
  • A man takes photos of a street flooded by Typhoon Maysak in Gangneung. AFP
    A man takes photos of a street flooded by Typhoon Maysak in Gangneung. AFP
  • A woman looks at debris caused by Typhoon Maysak in Pohang, South Korea. Reuters
    A woman looks at debris caused by Typhoon Maysak in Pohang, South Korea. Reuters
  • An electric pole falls down in Ulsan. AFP
    An electric pole falls down in Ulsan. AFP
  • A damaged car is seen under a wall in Ulsan. AFP
    A damaged car is seen under a wall in Ulsan. AFP
  • A woman cleans an apartment after strong winds from Typhoon Maysak left windows shattered, near Gwangalli beach in Busan. AFP
    A woman cleans an apartment after strong winds from Typhoon Maysak left windows shattered, near Gwangalli beach in Busan. AFP

Typhoon Maysak: storm capsizes cattle ship as it batters South Korea


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A powerful typhoon drenched the Korean peninsula on Thursday, killing at least one person in the South and inundating streets across a port in the North as it churned its way up the peninsula.

Typhoon Maysak – named after a Cambodian word for a type of tree – made landfall in Busan on the southern coast, packing gusts of up to 140 kilometres per hour, knocking down traffic lights and trees and flooding streets.

In the East China Sea, a ship carrying 43 crew and nearly 6,000 cattle from New Zealand to China capsized after losing an engine, the only crew member rescued so far told Japan's coastguard.

The Gulf Livestock 1 sent a distress call from the west of Amami Oshima island in south-western Japan on Wednesday as Maysak lashed the area with strong winds and heavy seas.

Japan's coastguard said it had rescued one crew member, Sareno Edvarodo, a 45-year-old chief officer from the Philippines, while searching for the ship.

According to the chief officer, the ship lost an engine before it was hit by a wave and capsized, a coastguard spokeswoman said.

When the ship capsized, crew were instructed to put on lifejackets. Mr Edvarodo told the coastguard he jumped into the water and did not see any other crew members before he was rescued.

On land, a woman was killed after a strong gust shattered her apartment window in Busan, while more than 2,200 people were moved to temporary shelters and about 120,000 homes were left without power across southern parts of the peninsula and on Jeju Island.

Another victim of the typhoon was a statue at a park in Ulsan of a brachiosaurus – a huge plant-eating dinosaur – which was pictured with its neck broken by strong gusts of wind.

A dinosaur sculpture is damaged by Typhoon Maysak in the southeastern port city of Ulsan. Yonhap via AFP
A dinosaur sculpture is damaged by Typhoon Maysak in the southeastern port city of Ulsan. Yonhap via AFP

The storm later made its way northwards, passing into the Sea of Japan, before making a second landfall at Kimchaek in North Korea.

Natural disasters tend to have a greater impact in the North due to its creaking infrastructure, and the country is vulnerable to flooding as many mountains and hills have long been deforested.

A man takes a photo of a submerged car park in Gangneung, South Korea. Yonhap via Reuters
A man takes a photo of a submerged car park in Gangneung, South Korea. Yonhap via Reuters

The typhoon brought heavy downpours across the North, with total rainfall in the 15 hours to 0300 GMT on Thursday reaching 385 millimetres in the port town of Wonsan on its east coast.

Pyongyang's state media carried live broadcasts of the situation, with one showing a reporter standing in a street inundated with water in the port town.

Authorities lifted their typhoon warning as the storm weakened and moved towards China.

"The typhoon will pass through Musan and leave our country," a meteorological officer told Korean Central Television. "I don't expect any effects."

A woman looks at debris caused by Typhoon Maysak in Pohang, South Korea. Yonhap via Reuters
A woman looks at debris caused by Typhoon Maysak in Pohang, South Korea. Yonhap via Reuters

Maysak is the second typhoon in a week to hit the Korean peninsula.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un last week visited a farming region hit by Typhoon Bavi and expressed relief the damage was "smaller than expected".

Meteorologists say another typhoon – Typhoon Haishen – is approaching and would make landfall on the peninsula on Monday morning with wind gusts of 144 kilometres per hour.