Flooding wreaks havoc throughout nation By Guo Nei (China Daily) Updated: 2004-07-08 01:51
The death toll this week in China from flooding, mud slides and other
water-related calamities has risen to 288 throughout 22 provinces and autonomous
regions, officials said Wednesday.
By Tuesday, more than 33.3 million people had been directly affected with
about 31 million hectares of farmland inundated and 130,000 houses destroyed,
according to the State Flood-Control and Drought Relief Headquarters.
"So far this summer, overall damage resulting from the disasters has not yet
moved beyond the nation's average recorded in the corresponding period from the
1990s," the agency said, indicating the worst may not yet have come.
Although intense rain has hit some areas since the beginning of flood season,
China's major rivers like the Yangtze and Yellow have so far remained below
their alarm levels.
But tens of thousands of locals have been plagued by flooding on some local
rain-swollen rivers with some villages and towns inundated.
Following heavy rains from central to Southwest China since the late June,
severe mountain torrents, mudslides and landslides have occurred in Hunan,
Yunnan, Guizhou provinces as well as the Xinjiang Uygur and Guangxi Zhuang
autonomous regions.
For the past two days, at least 13 people were killed by mountain torrents
Dehong Prefecture in Yunnan with 41 victims still missing. Authorities were
forced to withdraw 360 stranded locals to safer ground.
Ten people were killed either by mountain torrents or flash floods in
Guizhou, Guangxi and Xinjiang with two injured. Seven others have been missing
since last Sunday.
Emergency authorities have dispatched a work team for Yunnan -- the worst-hit
province -- to help in ongoing rescue operations.
By press time Wednesday, all victims of the calamities have been settled y
with social order remaining normal in the disaster-stricken
areas.
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