South China's coastal regions have battled strong winds and flooding as Typhoon Wipha, the sixth typhoon of the year, made landfall near Jiangmen City in Guangdong Province at 17:50 on Sunday.
Typhoon Wipha is expected to move westward at around 25 km per hour, with its intensity continuing to strengthen, according to meteorological forecasts.
According to the Guangdong emergency management bureau, as of 07:00 Sunday, a total of 440,400 people had been evacuated from both land and sea areas across the province.
The Hong Kong Observatory issued hurricane signal No. 10, the top level warning, under the effect of Wipha at 09:50 local time on Sunday.
Due to the storm, many public services and activities in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region have been suspended.
Macao Special Administrative Region's Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau on Sunday also issued signal No. 10 warning at 12:30 local time under the effect of Typhoon Wipha.
All public transportation services in Macao were suspended, as was the traffic on all four cross-sea bridges. According to the Macao Civil Aviation Authority, as of Sunday noon, a total of 140 flights were canceled and 13 rescheduled.
Typhoon Wipha brings floods, strong wind to southern China
Protests against federal immigration enforcement are spreading across the United States, with the latest demonstration unfolding directly in front of the White House.
Early Saturday, more than a hundred demonstrators gathered there, demanding changes to the Trump administration's immigration policies and accountability for recent shootings involving federal agents.
Immigrant rights and civil rights groups said this weekend's rallies mark a coordinated national response. Demonstrations are planned or already underway in major cities including Philadelphia, as well as across states such as North Carolina, Florida, Texas, and Washington, D.C., where organizers are calling for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to be removed from local communities.
The nationwide protests follow a deadly week in which three people were shot by federal agents in two days.
In Minneapolis, Minnesota, a 37-year-old woman, Renee Good, was killed during an enforcement operation by the ICE. A day later in Portland, Oregon, a man and a woman were wounded during a separate federal operation.
In the aftermath, Minnesota state officials accused the Trump administration of blocking their investigation by denying access to key evidence and prematurely drawing conclusions before a full review could be completed.
On Friday, Donald Trump defended the Department of Homeland Security's actions, sharply criticizing Minnesota leaders and calling them corrupt.
Local leaders have pushed back. During a Saturday news conference, the mayor of Minneapolis described ICE agents' actions as reckless.
Officials in both Minneapolis and Portland continue urging demonstrators to remain peaceful as protests intensify nationwide.
According to a 50501 Movement statement issued Friday, at least 32 people died in ICE custody in 2025.
Nationwide protests erupt in US after ICE shootings