In pictures: Typhoon Hinnamnor wreaks devastation along South Korea coast

The strongest cyclonic storm this year - Typhoon Hinnamnor - has struck South Korea causing damage to cities on the southern coast.

Fearing landslides and floods, officials evacuated about 3,500 people ahead of the storm, which made landfall in the island city of Geoje.

It then churned at a 54km/hr pace northwards, whipping up surf and driving heavy rains and floods.

No casualties have been reported but a 25-year-old man in Ulsan remains missing, authorities say.

President Yoon Suk-yeol held emergency response meetings on Monday as the country braced for Typhoon Hinnamnor, which was measured to be as intense as the devastating Maemi typhoon in 2003.

Trains were suspended, hundreds of flights were cancelled nationwide and businesses and schools shut early. North Korea also braced for the storm, with leader Kim Jong Un holding a two-day disaster prevention meeting.

Officials said the typhoon left South Korea off the coast of Ulsan on Tuesday morning, but it left a a trail of destruction in its wake.

It's expected to travel at a slightly weaker pace towards the northern Japanese city of Sapporo. But sea surface temperatures are several degrees above average, which could help sustain the storm, Nasa says.

Yonjap/Reuters Firefighters rescue a man from flooded Taehwa river in Ulsan, South Korea, September 6, 2022.Yonjap/Reuters
Firefighters rescue a man from the flooded Taehwa river in Ulsan on Tuesday
Yonhap/Reuters A road is inundated after Typhoon Hinnamnor made landfall on the southern coast of South Korea, in Pohang, South Korea, 06 September 2022Yonhap/Reuters
High tides whipped up by the typhoon crash onto a road in Pohang, an eastern coastal city
Yonghap/Reuters A signboard is seen damaged by Typhoon Hinnamnor in Changwon, South Korea, September 6, 2022.Yonghap/Reuters
Cyclonic winds ripped down signs and damaged awnings in the southern city of Changwon
Yonghap/Reuters A man stands on the edge of a damaged shop in Busan with flooded floors and broken windowsYonghap/Reuters
A battered store in a shopping district in Busan, a southern coast city
YONHAP/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock Brown water floods a road in PohongYONHAP/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
The huge surf brought in rocks and sea debris onto roads in Pohong
YONHAP NEWS AGENCY A man walks on a road along the coast damaged by Typhoon Hinnamnor in UlsanYONHAP NEWS AGENCY
Officials say the rain and winds will continue through Tuesday but the clean-up effort has already begun

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