Typhoon Doksuri tore through Vietnam Friday afternoon, reducing structures to piles of debris and knocking out electricity and telecommunications in several provinces, in one of the worst storms to hit the country in years.
Residents woke up Saturday to the widespread destruction in normally idyllic coastal communities popular among beachgoers.
"I sat inside my house covering my ears, I didn't dare leave as I was so scared," Mai Thi Tinh, whose restaurant in Ha Tinh province was completely destroyed, told AFP.
At least four people were killed and eight injured, according to Vietnam's Disaster Management Authority.
Some 123,000 homes were damaged and trees and power lines were torn down in five hard-hit provinces, the disaster agency said.
"The wind was so bad that I hid under the bed. I'm old but I'm afraid of death," 70-year-old retired teacher Tran Ngoc Khang told AFP in Ha Tinh.
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc visited the hard-hit province today to survey the damage.
Nearly 80,000 people were evacuated as the storm bore down while the government deployed a quarter of a million troops and a fleet of vehicles and ships.
Vietnam's central coast is routinely lashed by storms, especially during tropical storm season from May to October.
It has already been hit by severe weather this year, with 140 people dead or missing in natural disasters since January, according to official figures.
Forecasters warned of a risk of flooding and landslides as the storm swept through central and northern Vietnam, bringing with it heavy rains.
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