태풍 하이선 동해안 따라 북상…강풍 피해 속출<br /><br />Our top story this afternoon.<br />Another tropical storm has arrived in South Korea.<br />Typhoon Haishen is 30 kilometers south of Ulsan, and it'll soon be moving along the country's east coast.<br />Our Jang Tae-hyun is at a beach in Gyeongsangbuk-do Province.<br />Tae-hyun, how's it looking down there?<br />Good afternoon, Mark.<br />Typhoon Haishen has hit the southern part of the country, flooding the streets and even collapsing parts of some buildings.<br />Some parts of Pohang have lost electricity, and people have been advised to evacuate.<br />As of 7 AM today, some 600 people in the Gyeongsangnam-do Province have had to find temporary shelter.<br />The typhoon was expected to pass right through the middle of South Korea, but forecasters now expect it to make landfall on the east coast of the Gyeongsang-do Provinces.<br />The Korean weather agency says after the typhoon gets to the northeast of Busan,... it will then pass through the East Sea, moving north.<br />By 3 PM today, it will be 60 kilometers east of Gangneung in Gangwon-do Province and will head to North Korea by midnight.<br />Busan is expecting 100 to 300 millimeters of rain and wind speeds of up to about 145 kilometers an hour,... strong enough to send rocks flying and flip over cars.<br />The country raised the typhoon alert to its highest level as of Sunday 7 PM.<br />Along with the warning, authorities advised safety measures to protect people, especially those living in low-lying coastal areas and those vulnerable to landslides.<br />People in the affected areas should refrain from going out and take extra safety precautions.<br />I'll be back with more updates.<br />Back to you.<br />