Super Typhoon Sinlaku pounds remote US islands in the Pacific Ocean with ferocious winds
A super typhoon with ferocious winds and heavy rains was battering a group of remote U.S. islands in the Pacific Ocean late Tuesday, forcing residents to seeking shelter from flying tree limbs and collapsed buildings amid heavy rains, winds and flooding.
The center of the monster storm Super Typhoon Sinlaku was roaring along the Northern Mariana Islands late Tuesday local time, the National Weather Service said.
It’s the strongest tropical typhoon on Earth so far this year and was packing winds of up to 140 mph (241 kph) that were likely to bring power outages to the islands that are home to roughly 50,000 people.
“It’s hitting us hard,” Mayor Ramon “RB” Jose Blas Camacho of Saipan, where it was nighttime, told The Associated Press. “It’s so difficult for us to respond with this heavy rain, heavy wind to rescue people. Objects are just flying left and right.”

