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Typhoon Soudelor weakens over southeast China after leaving 22 dead, missing

WATCH ABOVE: The strongest storm to hit the planet so far this year has slammed Taiwan with fierce wind and torrential rain. The super-typhoon has left 10 people dead or missing and almost 200 others injured. It’s triggered mudslides and flooding, which caused power outages for four million people. Aarti Pole reports.

BEIJING – A typhoon that lashed Taiwan dumped heavy rain and winds on the Chinese mainland on Sunday, leaving a total of 22 people dead or missing, collapsing homes and trees and cutting power to more than a million homes.

Typhoon Soudelor made landfall in China’s Fujian province late Saturday night and was downgraded into a tropical storm as it moved across the region.

Rains from the typhoon triggered mudslides in mountainous Pingyang county in Zhejiang province, north of Fujian, killing nine people and leaving three others missing, the county government said.

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READ MORE: Saipan remains without water, electricity 4 days after Typhoon Soudelor hit US territory

The Fujian Civil Affairs Department said that the storm collapsed 36 houses and damaged 281 others. Authorities had evacuated more than 370,000 people and ordered around 32,000 boats back to port before the typhoon struck land.

State broadcaster showed people wading in knee-deep water in the provincial capital of Fuzhou and said that some streets were submerged under 80 centimetres (30 inches).

In Taiwan, where the typhoon made landfall Saturday, the National Fire Agency said five people died, five were missing, and a further 185 were injured. The dead or missing included an 8-year-old girl, her twin sister and their mother who were swept out to sea, a firefighter who was killed while another was injured after being hit by a drunken driver as they attempted to move a fallen tree.

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The storm downed trees, traffic lights and power lines on the island, causing more than 4 million households to lose electricity. More than 500 flights were cancelled or delayed.

WATCH: Footage of typhoon Soudelor hitting Chinese coast.

In Fujian, strong winds caused power outages to more than 1.41 million households before the storm made landfall, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Three airports were closed and more than 530 flights cancelled, while more than 7,000 soldiers and police were on standby, provincial authorities said.

Even before the storm made landfall, strong winds caused power outages to more than 1.41 million household in the province, Xinhua said.

On Friday afternoon, marine police rescued 55 university students and teachers trapped on a small island where they had been attending a summer camp, after strong gales stopped ferry services, Xinhua said.

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WATCH: Taiwan braced itself as a powerful typhoon, named Soudelor, made landfall onto the small island, evacuating hundreds from their homes. Seth Doane has the story.

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