Shanghai Daily

4 killed, 10 missing in storms amid Guangdong evacuation­s

-

Four people are dead and 10 others missing following storms that battered southern China, media said yesterday, with tens of thousands evacuated from areas hit by torrential downpours.

Heavy rain has descended upon the vast southern province of Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only “seen around once a century.”

“Three deaths were reported in Zhaoqing City while the remaining one is a rescuer in Shaoguan City,” Xinhua news agency reported, citing local authoritie­s.

Ten others remain missing as search and rescue efforts in the area continue to be carried out. More than 110,000 people have been relocated across Guangdong, according to Xinhua.

Of those, more than 45,000 were evacuated from the northern city of Qingyuan, which straddles the banks of the Bei River, a tributary in the wider Pearl River Delta, media reported yesterday.

In some parts of Qingyuan, rescuers tackled neck-high waters to extract residents, including an elderly lady trapped in waist-deep water in an apartment building.

Others remained on the upper floors of their houses, waiting for the waters to recede as friends delivered food by boat.

Before 2022, it rarely rained as heavily as it does now, and the floodwater­s were never as high, said Qingyuan resident Lin Xiuzheng, an online retail sales worker.

Across the province, 36 houses collapsed while 48 were severely damaged, resulting in a direct economic loss of nearly 140.6 million yuan (US$19.40 million), Xinhua reported.

Many rivers remained swollen yesterday, however, at levels above safety thresholds, with rainfall in recent days two to three times more than normal at this time of the year.

Heavy rain is expected to continue, with meteorolog­ical authoritie­s forecastin­g “thundersto­rms and strong winds in Guangdong’s coastal waters” — a stretch of sea bordering major cities, including Hong Kong and Shenzhen.

The intense convective weather in southern China was caused by a stronger-than-normal subtropica­l high, a semi-permanent high pressure system circulatin­g north of the equator.

The subtropica­l high led to warmer temperatur­es that drew in more moisturela­den air from the South China Sea and the Bay of Bengal, meteorolog­ists said, resulting in the intense precipitat­ion.

Neighborin­g provinces, including parts of Fujian, Guizhou and Guangxi, will also be affected by “short-term heavy rainfall,” the National Meteorolog­ical Center said.

“It is expected that the main impact period of strong convection will last from daytime until night,” it added.

Authoritie­s yesterday issued a yellow alert for rainstorms — the second-lowest in its four-tier system — with high levels of precipitat­ion expected to continue across large swathes of the country.

Guangdong is China’s densely populated manufactur­ing heartland, home to around 127 million people.

In Jiangwan Town, six people were injured and a number were trapped in landslides caused by heavy rain on Sunday, media reported.

Photograph­s published by CCTV showed waterfront homes destroyed by a wall of brown mud, and people sheltering in a soaked public sports court.

CCTV reported on Sunday that floods as high as 5.8 meters above the warning limit would strike in Pearl River tributarie­s yesterday morning.

(Agencies)

 ?? ?? A submerged area is seen in Qingyuan City, south China’s Guangdong Province, yesterday. — CFP
A submerged area is seen in Qingyuan City, south China’s Guangdong Province, yesterday. — CFP
 ?? ?? Rescue workers help the trapped people in Qingyuan City following major flooding in Guangdong Province.
— CFP
Rescue workers help the trapped people in Qingyuan City following major flooding in Guangdong Province. — CFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China