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Hong Kong reopens after world's most powerful cyclone Ragasa

25 Sep 2025, 1:20 AM
Hong Kong reopens after world's most powerful cyclone Ragasa
Hong Kong reopens after world's most powerful cyclone Ragasa

HONG KONG, Sept 25 — Hong Kong resumed flights out of its international airport today after a 36-hour suspension, reopening businesses, transportation services and some schools after the world's most powerful tropical cyclone this year lashed the financial hub.

Ragasa brought the densely populated city to a standstill from Tuesday afternoon, after sweeping through the northern Philippines and Taiwan where it killed 14, before making landfall on the southern Chinese city of Yangjiang yesterday.

More than 100 people were injured in Hong Kong, where authorities imposed the highest typhoon signal 10 for most of yesterday.

Today, the observatory maintained its second-lowest typhoon signal 3, keeping kindergartens and some schools shut as Ragasa moved away from the city and weakened into a tropical storm.

Flights were cancelled for 36 hours amid Typhoon Ragasa, as seen on this airport screen in Hong Kong, on September 24, 2025.

Huge waves crashed over areas of Hong Kong's eastern and southern shoreline yesterday, with widespread flooding submerging some roads and residential properties.

Seawater surged through the Fullerton hotel on the island's south, shattering glass doors and inundating the lobby. No injuries were reported and the hotel said services were operating as normal.

Hong Kong's Airport Authority said airlines would gradually resume flights starting from 6 am local time today, with all three runways operating simultaneously.

"It is anticipated that flights will be scheduled until late into late night tomorrow, handling over 1,000 flights at the normal level," it said, adding that it expected airport operations to be busy today and tomorrow.

A cyclist looks at a broken fence on a cycle path damaged by Super Typhoon Ragasa in Hong Kong, China, on September 24, 2025.

Authorities said they were urgently repairing collapsed roads, trying to clear more than 1,000 fallen trees and respond to around 85 cases of flooding.

Prior to Ragasa's arrival authorities handed out sandbags on Monday for residents to bolster their homes in low-lying areas, while many people stockpiled daily necessities, leading to bare supermarket shelves and surging fresh vegetable prices.

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