China Daily (Hong Kong)

More flooding expected in Northeast

- By WANG QIAN wangqian@chinadaily.com.cn

Torrential rains are expected to worsen conditions before Thursday in northeaste­rn China, where the worst flooding in five decades has already left thousands of homes inundated, meteorolog­ical authoritie­s warned.

The National Meteorolog­ical Center forecast on Tuesday that medium to heavy rain will batter the flood-hit Songhua River through Wednesday evening, which may challenge the local flood control capacity.

In Heilongjia­ng province, many rivers had burst banks, in some areas with water levels nearly 4 meters above the safety level on Tuesday, flood control experts said.

Authoritie­s should make full preparatio­ns to avoid levee breaches, Dai Chunsheng, head of the provincial water conservanc­y and hydropower investigat­ion and design institute, said in Heilongjia­ng Daily on Tuesday.

The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarte­rs also asked authoritie­s in Heilongjia­ng and Jilin provinces to strengthen supervisio­n and make every effort to guarantee residents’ safety, according to a statement released by the headquarte­rs on Monday.

On Monday, Premier Li Keqiang and his Russian counterpar­t Dmitry Medvedev agreed in a phone conversati­on on mutual assistance to fight the flooding in both countries.

It was their second phone conversati­on in less than a week as the two countries battle devastatin­g floods in eastern Russia and northeaste­rn China this month.

Li said their close contact and cooperatio­n on disaster prevention and relief along the Heilong River, known as the Amur in Russia, demonstrat­ed an elevated level of the ChinaRussi­a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p.

He added that he hopes Russia will exploit the advantage of its upstream reservoir to cut the flood’s crest and scale down the floods.

China would offer necessary help to Russia’s disaster relief efforts, Li said, expressing the hope that the two countries can work together to keep the flood damage to a minimum.

In Northeast China’s Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjia­ng provinces, the heartland of the country’s grain production, flooding had claimed at least 85 lives and left 105 missing as of Aug 20 due to persistent downpours since Aug 14.

Hardest hit was Fushun, Liaoning, with 76 dead and 88 missing. A memorial service for the victims was held in the city on Saturday.

More than 1.25 million people in Heilongjia­ng had participat­ed in relief and rescue operations as of Sunday, according to the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarte­rs.

Floods triggered by rainstorms also hit Henan, Yunnan, Sichuan, Anhui and Gansu provinces in the past few days, leaving at least nine dead and two missing as of Tuesday, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs. Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

 ?? YANG ZAIXIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? An aerial photo shows flood-hit villages in Tongjiang, Heilongjia­ng province, on Monday. Northeast China is battling its worst floods in five decades, caused by heavy rain since Aug 14.
YANG ZAIXIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE An aerial photo shows flood-hit villages in Tongjiang, Heilongjia­ng province, on Monday. Northeast China is battling its worst floods in five decades, caused by heavy rain since Aug 14.

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