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Muifa misses Shanghai, veers toward Shandong

Updated: 2011-08-07 15:25

(Agencies)

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BEIJING - Typhoon Muifa weakened as it approached China's coast on Sunday, avoiding a direct-hit on the financial capital Shanghai and veering north towards a tip of Shandong province that juts into the Yellow Sea.

Muifa misses Shanghai, veers toward Shandong

A woman stands as strong winds blow along the Bund near the Huangpu River in Shanghai August 6, 2011. [Photo/Agencies]

The storm was expected to skirt eastern seaboard while delivering strong winds and torrential rains. But forecasters said it could spare residents serious damage from what had been feared to be the area's worst typhoon in years.

In Shanghai, strong gusts knocked down billboards and briefly cut power to at least two residential areas, Sang Baoliang, deputy head of Shanghai's flood control headquarters, told Xinhua news agency.

Muifa, however, proved more disruptive than damaging. Authorities had evacuated more than 310,000 residents from Shanghai, cancelled more than 200 flights and closed two bridges to outlying islands, the news agency reported.

"It does not feel like a typhoon at all," Li Hongjun, 29, a visitor from Shaanxi province, told Reuters. "These winds are quite normal. I would think a typhoon would feel much stronger and there should be no one walking in the streets."  

China's National Meteorological Center said the storm, with maximum winds of 138 kilometers per hour (85 miles per hour), could brush past parts of Shandong province early on Monday.

Tropical Storm Risk (http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/) predicted that Muifa would likely slow to a tropical storm  as it headed north, making landfall near the port city of Dalian.

In the Yuyuan old town area of Shanghai, intermittent rain kept tourist numbers low, but many shops remained open. An umbrella shop run by Zhu Peinian, 58, was doing a brisk business.

"They did tell us that if the typhoon was strong, we would have to shut our shops and take a break for a few days. But we are open because the alert is over," he said.

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