Fierce winds hit US Pacific territories as Super Typhoon Bavi approaches near Guam
Super Typhoon Bavi is threatening U.S. Pacific island territories, including Guam, Rota, Tinian, and Saipan, with catastrophic winds and torrential rains.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedSuper Typhoon Bavi is threatening U.S. Pacific island territories, including Guam, Rota, Tinian, and Saipan, with catastrophic winds and torrential rains. Residents were urged to take shelter as the Category 5 storm, with sustained winds potentially reaching 180 mph, was forecast to make landfall early Monday. Rota is already experiencing extreme winds, and warnings are in effect for other islands. This comes months after Super Typhoon Sinlaku impacted the region. Guam Governor Lou Leon Guerrero advised residents to stay home or at shelters and avoid roads due to the imminent danger to life posed by flying projectiles and downed utilities. Despite its fast pace, the storm's size means tropical storm conditions could persist through Monday night.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedGuam Governor urged people to stay home or at a shelter and to avoid the roads.
Bavi posed an 'imminent danger to life,' with residents told to move to interior rooms and stay away from windows.
Rota was encountering catastrophic wind, with an extreme wind warning in effect.
The cyclone is forecast to be a category five super typhoon with winds that could reach 180 mph and gusts of 215 mph.
Super Typhoon Bavi was expected to make landfall early Monday, threatening an area still recovering from another destructive storm earlier this year.