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Deadly typhoon names Hato, Kai-tak and Tembin to be dropped from official list of future storm titles, says Hong Kong Observatory

  • Replacement names agreed by United Nations committee that mean lynx, puppy and mandarin duck
  • Changes made as mark of respect to the hundreds who died in the 2017 disasters

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Kai-tak, which in 2017 killed hundreds in the Philippines, is one of three typhoon names being retired. Photo: AFP

Three names given to deadly typhoons that wrought havoc in the region have been dropped from an approved list of titles for future storms.

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Hundreds were killed in the Hato, Kai-tak and Tembin tropical cyclones that landed in China and the Philippines in 2017.

Those names will be retired and replaced with yamaneko, koinu and yun-yeung, which mean lynx, puppy and mandarin duck or a popular tea-in-coffee drink in the city respectively, the Hong Kong Observatory announced on Wednesday.

The move is made as a mark of respect to those who lost their lives in previous tragedies and to minimise confusion between different weather events.

Hato, which will no longer be used as a name for tropical cyclones in the Asia-Pacific, makes landfall in Hong Kong at Victoria Harbour in August 2017. Photo: Xinhua
Hato, which will no longer be used as a name for tropical cyclones in the Asia-Pacific, makes landfall in Hong Kong at Victoria Harbour in August 2017. Photo: Xinhua
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“According to convention, the Typhoon Committee will consider retiring the name of a tropical cyclone which has caused serious casualties and economic losses,” a statement issued by the Hong Kong Observatory said.

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