Typhoon Hinnamnor: Seven drown in flooded South Korean car park

KIM HEE-CHUL/EPA Firefighters and military officials rescue one of the missing residentsKIM HEE-CHUL/EPA
Crew said they rescued two people, who reportedly survived by clinging to ceiling pipes for over 12 hours

Seven people in South Korea have died after they were trapped in an underground car park during floods caused by Typhoon Hinnamnor.

They had gone down to move their cars but got caught by the incoming torrents.

Crew said they rescued two people, who reportedly survived by clinging to ceiling pipes for more than 12 hours.

Typhoon Hinnamnor, the strongest cyclonic storm this year so far, hit South Korea earlier this week.

Rescuers had to wade through metres of brown water to enter the almost completely submerged basement on Tuesday night.

According to news site Yonhap, all nine people were residents of an apartment building who had earlier on Tuesday morning been told by the management office to move their cars from the car park.

The survivors - a man in his 30s and a woman in her 50s - were reported to be in stable condition.

KIM HEE-CHUL/EPA Crews remove a body - covered by a white sheet -from the submerged basement car parkKIM HEE-CHUL/EPA
Crews remove a body - covered by a white sheet -from the submerged basement car park
KIM HEE-CHUL/EPA Firefighters and military officials search in an underground parking lot of an apartment in Nam-guKIM HEE-CHUL/EPA
The water rushed in before many people were able to get out

President Yoon Suk-yeol expressed his grief over the drownings, calling it a "disaster".

"I couldn't sleep last night because of this tragedy," he said.

He added that he had designated the city a special disaster zone, and would travel to the region later on Wednesday.

Pohang, the city where the tragedy occurred, has suffered the worst damage across the country. In one area, a beachside hotel collapsed on its foundations during the storm. The resort operators told the BBC no guests had been injured.

EPA People stand in front of a collapsed building on a beach in PohangEPA
The beachside resort collapsed during the storm

At least 10 people have now died in South Korea as a result of Typhoon Hinnamnor, which swept the country's southern and eastern coasts on Monday and Tuesday, driving huge surf, gale-force winds and heavy rain.

Several other cities across the south - including Busan and Ulsan- are also dealing with wreckage caused by the storm, which ripped up roads, smashed building windows and flattened trees.

South Korea - like many countries in East Asia - has over the past few months endured extreme rains as well as record temperatures.

In early August, it recorded massive downpours which flooded cities, including the capital Seoul. Such floods killed at least eight people, including three who were living in basement apartments.

The deaths prompted Korea's president to outlaw such units - known as banjiha, which were popularised in the Oscar-winning film Parasite.

South Korea's Banjiha apartments: 'I have nowhere else to go'