Vietnamese authorities were still assessing the damage on Friday

Vietnam (AFP) - Typhoon Kalmaegi churned across Vietnam Friday, claiming five more lives after its devastating passage through the Philippines where the death toll rose to 188.

Kalmaegi unleashed record rainfall and flooding in the central Philippines this week – sweeping away cars, trucks and shipping containers before lashing Vietnam.

“The roof of my house was just blown away,” said Nguyen Van Tam, a 42-year-old fisherman in Vietnam’s Gia Lai province where the storm made landfall late Thursday.

“We were all safe, (but) the typhoon was really terrible, so many trees fallen,” he said, adding that his boat had survived intact.

The environment ministry reported five dead, and 57 houses collapsed in Gia Lai and neighbouring Dak Lak

Vietnamese authorities were still assessing the damage on Friday, but the environment ministry reported five dead, and 57 houses collapsed in Gia Lai and neighbouring Dak Lak.

Nearly 3,000 more had their roofs blown off or were damaged, it said, while 11 boats or ships sank.

Vo Thi Danh, 43, watched from higher ground as Kalmaegi ripped through Nhon Hai fishing village in Gia Lai, splitting boats into kindling and sweeping away the small seaside house where she lived with her family.

“The waves were so high, swallowing in the whole house,” she told AFP in tears as she surveyed the rubble. “The house totally collapsed, nothing left.”

It was one of seven homes clustered together in the fishing village that were reduced to chunks of concrete and twisted metal.

In the streets along Gia Lai’s Quy Nhon beach, AFP journalists saw rescue workers and soldiers working with residents to clear uprooted trees, remove debris and collect sheet-metal roofs blown away in the night.

A man looks at damage caused by typhoon Kalmaegi in the Quy Nhon coastal area of Gia Lai province, central Vietnam

The state power company said 1.6 million clients lost electricity as the typhoon smashed the central coast, but service to a third of them had been restored by Friday morning.

Vietnam is in one of the most active tropical cyclone regions on Earth and is typically affected by 10 typhoons or storms a year.

Kalmaegi was the 13th of 2025 and hit the country with sustained winds of up to 149 kilometres (92 miles) per hour, according to the environment ministry.

Scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful due to human-driven climate change. Warmer oceans allow typhoons to strengthen rapidly, and a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, meaning heavier rainfall.

Fast-moving Kalmaegi had already swept northwest toward Laos by morning with significantly weakened winds, but heavy rain was still forecast for much of Vietnam’s central coast, the national weather bureau said.

The storm was next forecast to hit Thailand, which issued a warning Friday for heavy rainfall and flooding starting in the northeast and spreading to the rest of the country.

- Relentless rains -

Kalmaegi had initially battered the islands of Cebu and Negros in the Philippines before swooping back out to sea.

Floodwaters described as unprecedented rushed through the hardest hit Cebu province’s towns and cities, where the hunt for missing people continues.

A worker cleans broken glass at a hotel close to Quy Nhon beach as Typhoon Kalmaegi makes landfall in Gia Lai province in central Vietnam

Philippine authorities raised the death toll to 188, with 135 still missing.

The typhoon hit central Vietnam as it was still reeling from more than a week of flooding and record rains that killed at least 47 people and submerged centuries-old historic sites.

The heavy rains starting in late October had drenched the former imperial capital Hue and the ancient town of Hoi An, both UNESCO-listed sites, turning streets into canals and flooding tens of thousands of homes.

Up to 1.7 metres (5 feet 6 inches) fell over one 24-hour period in a downpour breaking national records.

With more than 3,200 kilometres of coastline and a network of 2,300 rivers, Vietnam faces a high risk of flooding.

Before Kalmaegi, natural disasters had already left 279 people dead or missing this year and caused more than $2 billion in damage, according to Vietnam’s national statistics office.