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Dept: Increase due to continuous downpour in province

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Poyang Lake, China’s largest freshwater lake located in the eastern province of Jiangxi, has seen its water level rise to a record high, according to the provincial department of water resources.

At around midnight yesterday, the water level at the lake’s Xingzi hydrologic­al station rose to 22.53m, 0.01m higher than the record in 1998, and continued going up, said the department.

A recent round of rainfall and upstream inflows has led to a sharp rise in the river water level in Jiangxi. The incessant downpours have also pushed the lake water to exceed warning levels since July 5.

So far, 34 hydrologic­al stations in the province have seen water currents exceed warning levels.

Xu Weiming, secretary-general with the provincial flood control and drought relief headquarte­rs, said the lake area had seen significan­t improvemen­t in the embankment and flood-resistant equipment compared with 1998 when a devastatin­g flood occurred along the Yangtze River.

“We will put the safety of the people’s lives in priority and make every effort to battle against the historic floods,” he added.

The Changjiang Water Resources Commission issued a red alert for floods in the Poyang Lake area on July 10, and a day later, Jiangxi province raised its flood-control response from level two to level one, the top level of China’s four-tier emergency response for floods.

Floods since July 6 have affected over 5.2 million people in the province, with 432,000 people evacuated from flood-prone areas.

A total of 167,000 people are in urgent need of living assistance, according to the local flood control and drought relief headquarte­rs.

The floods have damaged over 455,700ha of crops and caused a direct economic loss of 6.49 billion yuan (RM3.9bil).

On Saturday, more than 53,300 people were mobilised in fighting the floods in Jiangxi, aided by 1,545 sets of mechanical equipment, said the headquarte­rs.

According to the Emergency Management MInistry, the country has allocated a batch of supplies, including 190 boats, 3,000 tents, 10,000 folding beds, 10,000 blankets and 20,000 quilts to help with local flood control and disaster relief.

 ?? — China Daily/ANN ?? Water woes: People gathering at a road in Yongxiu county, Jiangxi province, which part of it is flooded after the water level of Poyang Lake rose rapidly due to recent continuous downpours.
— China Daily/ANN Water woes: People gathering at a road in Yongxiu county, Jiangxi province, which part of it is flooded after the water level of Poyang Lake rose rapidly due to recent continuous downpours.
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