Hundreds of thousands evacuate as Vietnam braces for Typhoon Bualoi

As Typhoon Bualoi’s strengthening approach forces the government to shut down several airports, Vietnam has mobilized around 100 000 military personnel to assist 250 000 people in evacuating.

According to the meteorology agency, Bualoi, the 10th typhoon to hit Vietnam this year, is currently at sea, generating winds of 130 km/h (80 mph) and is expected to make landfall later on Sunday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

“This storm moves quickly, moving at nearly twice the rate that it does,” with a strong impact and a wide area of impact. The agency claimed that it is capable of causing multiple natural disasters at once, including coastal flooding, flash floods, heavy rain, and powerful winds.

According to the government newspaper Viet Nam News, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh has also demanded the country’s waters’ “highest level of readiness” as Bualoi entered.

Three Ho Chi Minh fishermen have vanished before the landfall, according to Viet Nam News, after one vessel sank and another was “disabled” by large waves off the coast of Quang Tri province. Eight others were saved.

According to the report, the two vessels were spotted stranded about 1.5 kilometers (1 mile) from the Cua Viet Channel’s mouth.

More than 210, 000 residents of Da Nang, the country’s largest city, are being evacuated, according to state media, while more than 32, 000 Hue residents who live close to coastal areas are also expected to relocate to safer areas.

According to the AFP news agency, more than 15, 000 residents of Ha Tinh, a major steel production hub, are scheduled to leave for temporary accommodations in schools and medical facilities, according to authorities.

According to the VN Express news website, the city government mobilized more than 200 people using trucks, sacks, sand, bamboo stakes, and stone to protect the coastline.

Four domestic airports were reported to be closed, and all fishing vessels in the typhoon’s path were rerouted to harbor.

Additionally, it was required that residents of coastal regions secure their vessels.

“I’m a little anxious, but I’m still optimistic that things will turn out fine in the aftermath.” After the most recent Typhoon Kajiki, we were all in complete safety. Nguyen Cuong, a resident of Ha Tinh City, told AFP: “I hope this one will be the same or less severe.”

The Philippines was stricken by mudslides and flooding on Friday when Bualoi struck the country. 10 people have been killed, according to the most recent report from the Philippine media, and 10 are still missing.

According to scientists, as the world warms, the effects of climate change are getting stronger.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development estimates that in Vietnam, more than 100 people died or disappeared in the first seven months of 2025.

A tourist boat capsized in Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay in July, causing the sudden thunderstorm to kill at least 37 people and leave five others missing.

Marc Marquez wins 2025 MotoGP world championship at Japanese Grand Prix

Moldova holds parliamentary elections hit by claims of Russian interference

At least 4 killed in major Russian drone, missile attack on Ukraine’s Kyiv

Poland briefly closes airspace as NATO increases presence in the Baltic Sea

As Russia launches a new wave of strikes against Ukraine, Poland has briefly closed some of its airspace southeast of the city’s capital Warsaw due to “unplanned military activity.”

The transatlantic security bloc NATO announced that its mission in the Baltic Sea is being strengthened in response to drone incursions in Denmark and reported drone sightings in Norway with the deployment of Polish and allies in its airspace on Sunday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

As diplomatic efforts to end the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine falter, new information highlights the rising tension in the region, which raises the possibility of a wider conflict erupting into Europe.

After Russia launched strikes on Ukraine, the Polish armed forces reported in the most recent incident that it scrambled aircraft to ensure the security of its airspace.

The actions were described as preventive and intended to secure airspace and safeguard people, according to the statement.

Up until early in the morning, Lublin and Rzeszow’s airspace was expected to be closed.

As of 03:00 GMT on Sunday, Ukraine’s air force had issued air raid alerts in response to Russian strikes.

Russian drones intercepted earlier this month by Polish and NATO forces entering Poland’s airspace. This was their first direct military retaliation against Moscow since the Kremlin’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Sergey Lavrov, the Russian prime minister of foreign affairs, warned NATO and the EU that “any aggression against my country will be met with a decisive response.”

Lavrov insisted at the UN General Assembly on Saturday that Moscow was prepared to react if provoked but that it had no intentions to attack the West.

In response to a string of incidents in Denmark, NATO announced on Saturday that it would be upgrading its presence in the Baltic Sea with an air-defence frigate and other assets, including “intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance platforms.”

Unidentified drones were reportedly spotted overnight on Saturday near military installations.

Copenhagen Airport, the busiest airport in the Nordic region, was also forced to close for several hours late on Monday due to the presence of several large drones in its airspace. In the days that followed, five smaller Danish airports, both for business and for military, temporarily closed.

The incursions, according to Danish authorities, are hybrid attacks, and Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called them “the most serious attack on Danish critical infrastructure to date.”

Police in neighboring Norway announced on Saturday that they were looking into possible drone sightings close to Norway’s Oerland Air Force base, which is the main hub for Norway’s F-35 jets.

A joint headquarters for the Norwegian armed forces told the Reuters news agency, “The guards at the base made several observations outside the base’s perimeter early on Saturday.”

Brynjar Stordal said in a separate statement to the AFP news agency, “The investigation will find out what it was.”

He claimed that “at least two drones” flew “for about an hour” in a restricted area close to the base before disappearing.

Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt in Germany reported on Saturday that Schleswig-Holstein, a state in northern Germany, had been spotted over the state on Friday.

He claimed that he wants to make air safety regulations more stringent so that drones can be shot down by the armed forces.

Defense ministers from about 10 EU countries made the announcement on Friday that building a “drone wall” to secure their borders is a priority.

According to state news agency RIA Novosti, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the measures would “accrobate the military and political tensions on our continent.”