The dead and missing people may have been washed away by floods or buried under the collapsed houses in Wenzhou City in Zhejiang Province, state-run Xinhua news agency reported, citing local flood control and drought relief authorities.
After pounding Taiwan where it claimed six lives and injured 102 people, Soudelor made a landfall in the Chinese coast last night in Fujian Province and moved from there to neighbouring Zhejiang and Jiangxi provinces.
A total of 2,21,900 people were affected in Wenzhou, with a direct economic loss of 248 million yuan.
Zhejiang Province issued an orange alert for rainstorms earlier today.
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So far precipitation in 16 cities and counties reached 250 mm. The city of Fuding experienced the heaviest downpour of over 501 mm. In the provincial capital of Fuzhou, much of the downtown area was waterlogged.
More than 10,000 trees had fallen and traffic stalled on flooded streets.
A total of 1,63,200 people were evacuated to shore last night, according to the provincial flood control and drought relief office.
Three airports in the province were also closed, with more than 530 flights cancelled.
Six expressways were closed. Also, 191 high-speed trains were cancelled.
As the typhoon moved to east China's Zhejiang and Jiangxi provinces, the Fujian flood control and drought relief office downgraded the level-three typhoon emergency response to level-two.
Meanwhile, east China's Jiangxi Province launched a level-three emergency response as the typhoon was expected to land in the province around noon today.