Hanoi flooded again as storm season brings more rain to Vietnam’s north

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Heavy downpours flooded major roads, leaving motorbikes and cars stranded and forcing residents to wade through calf-deep water.

Heavy downpours flooded major roads, leaving motorbikes and cars stranded and forcing residents to wade through calf-deep water.

PHOTO: EPA

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- Torrential rain triggered by Typhoon Matmo flooded parts of Hanoi on Oct 7, the latest in a series of deluges that have inundated the Vietnamese capital over the past month as a run of storms has swept across the country’s northern regions.

Heavy downpours flooded major roads, leaving motorbikes and cars stranded and forcing residents to wade through calf-deep water.

Inner-city districts have been particularly affected, with drainage struggling to handle the volume of rain.

“It’s a loop – rain comes, streets flood and people desperately try to get by,” said Mr Nguyen Ngoc Long, a Hanoi resident. “I fear this will soon become a norm for us.”

Several schools in the capital closed or shifted to online teaching, while several flights to and from Noi Bai International Airport have been delayed or rescheduled.

Last week, there was severe flooding in Hanoi due to Typhoon Bualoi, which

killed at least 51 people in Vietnam

 and caused approximately US$600 million (S$775.8 million) of damage.

Many families had just finished cleaning up mud and debris from Bualoi before Matmo brought another wave of heavy rain.

The weather agency has forecast rain and thunderstorms in Hanoi throughout the morning of Oct 7, warning of potential floods in low-lying areas, and said that up to three more storm systems were expected to hit the country before the end of 2025. REUTERS

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