Deadly storms sweep eastern Asia
Two strong storms across the western Pacific have left scores of people dead or missing.
At least 10 people have been killed in Japan in flash floods generated by the approaching tropical storm Etau.
Meanwhile Typhoon Morakot hit mainland China on Sunday, killing at least one child and prompting almost a million people to flee from coastal areas.
It had previously hit Taiwan, killing at least 12 people and causing the worst flooding in five decades.
Taiwanese rescue teams are still searching for more than 50 people registered as missing.
Typhoons and tropical storms are frequent in the region between July and September.
Swept away
Nearly 50,000 people in western Japan have been told to leave coastal areas after warnings of rain, floods and mudslides triggered by the approaching tropical storm Etau.
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Eight people have died in Hyogo prefecture, including one man whose car was swept away by a swollen river and a woman who was found dead in a gutter.
Another woman was killed in a mudslide in Okayama prefecture.
The storm may hit central Japan on Tuesday, an official at the Japan Meteorological Agency said.
Meanwhile, Typhoon Morakot dumped a record 2.5 metres (100 inches) of rain on Taiwan over the weekend, leaving at least 12 people dead, among them a group reportedly washed away from a makeshift shelter in Kaohsiung in the south.
In addition to the dead and missing, another 30 people were injured as Morakot buffeted the island with powerful winds.
In one incident, an entire hotel - empty at the time - was swept away by the waters.
The typhoon then went on to hit mainland China on Sunday afternoon, destroying more than 2,000 houses and causing at least one major river to burst its banks.
Chinese state media said the sky turned completely dark in Beibi, Fujian, when it made landfall.
Trees were uprooted as high winds and heavy rain lashed the coast.
Some 473,000 residents of Zhejiang province were evacuated before the storm struck, as well as 480,000 from Fujian, Xinhua news agency said.
In Zhejiang's Wenzhou City a four year-old child was killed when a house collapsed. Dozens of roads were said to be flooded and the city's airport was closed.
Rescuers used dinghies to reach the worst-hit areas; in one area only the tops of trees were said to be showing above the floodwater.
Although the storm is losing strength, violent rainstorms are expected across six eastern Chinese provinces and Taiwan over the next few hours.
Morakot has also contributed to heavy rains in the Philippines. At least 10 people were killed in flooding and landslides in the north of the country last week.
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