Summary

Media caption,

Watch: Cars pile up on Philippines streets after floods

  1. More than 50 flights in Vietnam cancelled or rescheduled - national airlinepublished at 10:14 GMT 6 November

    More than 50 flights in Vietnam have been cancelled or rescheduled, according to national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines.

    About eight airports in the central region, including the international airport in Da Nang, have either suspended operations or are preparing to do so, aviation authorities say.

    We'll bring more on this we we have it.

  2. Rescue teams get to work while displaced Filipinos rest in shelter - latest imagespublished at 09:46 GMT 6 November

    Before making landfall in Vietnam, Kalmaegi left a trail of devastation in the Philippines - and at least 114 people dead.

    Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has declared a state of emergency - the threshold of which involves mass casualty, major damage to property, and disruption to means of livelihoods and the normal way of life for people in the affected areas.

    The typhoon, known locally as Tino, ripped through the populous island of Cebu, submerging entire towns and sweeping cars through the streets. Tens of thousands of people have been evacuated, others are resting in shelters.

    Here are some of the latest images we're seeing:

    Recue teamImage source, EPA/Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    Emergency responders work on retrieving a body at the site of a landslide in Cebu City

    Affected residents take shelter inside a classroom, at a school that has been converted into an evacuation centreImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Kalmaegi has displaced more than 400,000 in the Philippines

    A man walks along a muddy street where cars piled up after being swept away in floods brought by Typhoon Kalmaegi pile up at a subdivision in Bacayan, Cebu CitImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Streets are covered in mud and images show piles of cars

  3. Kalmaegi strengthens as it barrels towards Vietnampublished at 09:32 GMT 6 November

    Waves crash onto Quy Nhon beach as Typhoon Kalmaegi heads for central VietnamImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Waves crash onto Vietnam's Quy Nhon beach ahead of the storm's arrival

    Typhoon Kalmaegi passed through the Philippines on Thursday, and is now barrelling towards central Vietnam with increasing windspeeds.

    It is expected to make landfall imminently, bringing waves of up to 8m (26 ft), according to Vietnam's weather bureau.

    Thousands of people who live in coastal communities have been asked to evacuate, and Deputy Prime Minister Tran Hong Ha has urged local officials to treat the storm with urgency.

    The AFP news agency says officials are knocking on doors and warning people to flee.

    We will bring you live updates as we get them. Stay with us.