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Typhoon Bebinca hits Shanghai, strongest storm since 1949

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Pedestrians struggle with their umbrellas in strong winds and rain as Typhoon Bebinca approaches [Aljazeera]

Typhoon Bebinca has made landfall in Shanghai, the strongest storm to hit China’s biggest city since 1949.

The typhoon hit at about 7.30am (23:30 GMT) on Monday in the coastal area of Lingang New City in Shanghai’s east, the China Meteorological Administration said.

With wind speeds of up to 151 kilometres per hour (94 miles per hour) near its eye, Bebinca is the strongest storm to hit the city since Typhoon Gloria in 1949, the state-run Global Times reported.

Flights and train services were cancelled, highways closed and Shanghai’s 25 million residents advised to stay at home ahead of the storm’s arrival. A 40km/h (25mph) speed limit was imposed on roads inside the city.

A red alert was in place and some 9,000 people evacuated from the Chongming District, an island at the mouth of the Yangtze River, city authorities said.

Local authorities ordered all vessels to return to port to avoid heavy seas.

Am aerial view of fishing boats in port in Zhoushan in eastern China
Fishing boats take shelter from Bebinca in the port in Zhoushan [Aljazeera]

CCTV broadcast footage of a reporter by the coast in the neighbouring Zhejiang province, where waves pounded the craggy coastline under leaden skies.

“If I step out into the storm, I can barely speak,” the reporter said. “You can see that the surface of the sea is just wave after wave, each higher than the last.”

It is rare for Shanghai to get a direct hit from strong typhoons, which generally make landfall further south in China. Yagi,  a destructive Category 4 storm,  struck southern Hainan province last week and caused devastation in Vietnam.

[Aljazera]



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Free 14 day visa extension for visitors unable to depart Sri Lanka

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The Department of Immigration and Emmigration has decided effective from 28th February 2026,  to grant a free fourteen  (14) day visa extension to all tourists who are unable to leave Sri Lanka  due to flight cancellations.

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US embassy in Dubai hit; Israel pounds Tehran, Beirut

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[pic Instagram]

US and Israel’s bombardment of Iran and Lebanon continues, with a strike on a hotel near Beirut and the building of the Assembly of Experts in the Iranian city of Qom as the death toll surpasses 800 in both countries.

Tehran continues retaliatory attacks on Israel and US targets in the Middle East for a fourth night, with strikes reported on Washington’s embassy in Dubai and a port in the city of Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates.

US President Donald Trump says the US is prepared to deploy the navy to escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz after Iran declared the vital waterway closed – a disruption already rippling through the region, with Iraq slowing or halting oil production at the Rumaila field and the West Qurna 2 project.

[Aljazeera]

 

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Perera, Sugandika, Ranaweera take Sri Lanka to T20I series win over West Indies

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File photo: Hasini Perera recorded her second T20I half-century

Opener Hasini Perera’s second T20I fifty, on the back of two wickets apiece by left-arm spinners Sugandika Kumari and Inoka Ranaweera,  capped off another strong effort by Sri Lanka as they beat West Indies by nine wickets to seal the three-match T20I series 2-0.

Captain Chamari Athapaththu won the toss and elected to field in Grenada, and much like in the second T20I, the spinners strangled the West Indies batters. Sugandika was introduced into the attack in the third over and she struck with her third ball, nipping out Hayley Matthews, caught and bowled for 8.

Ranaweera then struck with her second ball, prising out Shawnisha Hector, before Sugandika picked up a third wicket in the powerplay in the form of Eboni Brathwaite. Deandra Dottin struck three fours in her first ten balls as West Indies ended the powerplay on a high but slowed down spectacularly after that, only managing 28 off 39 balls as West Indies added just 34 runs in the ten overs after the end of the powerplay.

Ranaweera finished her frugal four-over spell by trapping Dottin lbw, and four balls later, Kavisha Dilhari cleaned up the other set batter, Stafanie Taylor, for 24.

At 83 for 5 after 18 overs, West Indies were in danger of falling short of 100 but Chinelle Henry gave the innings much-needed impetus, smashing an unbeaten 32 off 15 and helping them take 36 runs off the last two overs. Despite the late onslaught, West Indies finished on a below-par 119 for 5.

In reply, Athapaththu raced away again, crashing four fours in the first three overs with Sri Lanka going at nearly ten an over. Sri Lanka added 48 runs in the powerplay without losing a wicket and while Athapaththu fell soon after for a 22-ball 32 to Afy Fletcher, she had set a solid platform.

With the required rate less than six an over, Perera and Imesha Dulani focused more on rotating the strike, putting together an unbroken 72-run stand for the second wicket off 64 balls. Perera took 58 balls to reach her fifty before Dulani finished the match and the series by striking a four off Matthews. Sri Lanka won the game with 14 balls to spare, making it a double success for them, having earlier won the ODIs 2-1.

Brief scores:
Sri Lanka Women 121 for 1 in 17.4 overs  (Hasini Perera 52*, Imesha Dulani 34*, Chamari Athapaththu 3; Afy  Fletcher 1-14) beat West Indies omen  119 for 5 in 20 overs  (Stafnie Taylor 24, Deandra Dottin 28, Chinelle Henry 32*;  Inoka Ranaweera 2-16, Sugandika Kumari 2-32, Kavisha Dilhari 1-13) by nine wickets

[Cricinfo]

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