Los Angeles Times

China’s flooding leaves 170 dead

- By Julie Makinen julie.makinen@latimes.com Nicole Liu and Yingzhi Yang in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

BEIJING — More than 170 people died and scores remained missing after heavy rains touched off floods and landslides in China this week, officials said Saturday. State-run media put the economic losses at more than $2 billion, and meteorolog­ists warned that more thundersto­rms were expected in the coming days.

In northern China, where most of the deaths were concentrat­ed, the worst-hit area was Hebei province, which encircles the capital, Beijing. At least 114 people died there, the provincial branch of the Ministry of Civil Affairs told the official New China News Agency on Saturday. An additional 111 people were still missing in Hebei as of Saturday.

Authoritie­s put the number of affected people in Hebei alone at more than 9 million, with nearly 300,000 evacuated.

In the city of Xingtai, about 200 miles southwest of Beijing, at least 25 people were dead and 13 were missing after the Qili River overflowed its banks in the early hours Wednesday, flooding homes as people slept.

Photos and videos circulatin­g online appeared to show residents retrieving the bodies of dead children from the floodwater­s, but it was impossible to verify the authentici­ty of the postings. The Beijing News reported that the dead and missing included five children ranging in age from 3 to 10, as well as an 86-year-old man.

Some residents suggested the disaster in Xingtai might have been manmade, resulting from the release of floodwater­s from a nearby reservoir, saying the reservoir does not have a floodgate that opens into the river that flooded.

On Saturday evening, the mayor of Xingtai, Dong Xiaoyu, held a news conference and apologized for the failure of city officials to adequately protect residents from the floods.

But at a news conference earlier, officials denied that the disaster was caused by the intentiona­l release of water from the nearby reservoir, saying the reservoir’s floodgate does not open into the river that flooded, but into a different waterway.

The vice mayor of Xingtai said that last week’s downpours were the heaviest since August 1996, and that between 3 p.m. and midnight Tuesday, nearly 60% of the typical annual rainfall had inundated the area.

Water brimmed over the reservoir into the Qili River, officials said, and flash flooding in hills to the west also flowed into the western channel of the South-North Water Transfer Project, a massive engineerin­g effort designed to move water to China’s arid north from lush southern provinces. The water in the transfer-way also ended up in the Qili, causing the deadly floods, officials said. The problem was exacerbate­d because the Qili narrows in one place near a major highway, they added.

Other deaths were reported in central and southern China. A total of 19 people died in Guizhou province and in the giant city of Chongqing between Tuesday and Friday, the Ministry of Civil Affairs said. Between June 16 and Friday, 16 people died in Hubei province, and seven others died in Jiangxi, the ministry said.

Across the country, army troops were dispatched to rescue people stranded in flooded areas and deliver emergency aid by helicopter.

The flooding has inundated farmlands, wiping out $2.4 billion worth of crops, the news agency said. In the city of Shijiazhua­ng, near Xingtai, thousands have been without running water since Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States