Los Angeles Times

Villagers call flood warnings inadequate

There was no time to act, survivors say in Daxian, China.

- By Julie Makinen

BEIJING — All day Tuesday, Gao Longtao’s phone kept buzzing with alerts from the local government: Heavy rains would be pelting his hometown, Xingtai, about 220 miles southwest of Beijing, the notices said.

The rain came in sheets. But even when the electricit­y went out about 10 p.m., no one in his village, Daxian, had any inkling of the inundation soon to come. Most people, he said, simply went to bed, apparently hoping the thunderclo­uds would soon pass.

In the wee hours of Wednesday morning, loudspeake­rs in the neighborho­od suddenly blared with a warning: A flood from the nearby Qili River was imminent. But there was no time to act, Gao said. Within moments, a rush of water surged into his home.

“The flood came in so fast, adults couldn’t even protect themselves, let alone protect babies,” said the college student, who was home on summer vacation.

In the pitch black, Gao was swept into the surging waters. Somehow, he found a tree and clung to it for his life. “I was extremely scared, but I’m only 21. I have to survive, for my family,” he said.

About 6 a.m., when the dark of night and waters began to recede, Gao was able to make his way to land and find his parents and 10-yearold brother, who had clambered to their rooftop during the storm. Though he’s thankful they all survived, he’s impatient for answers.

As of midday Sunday, 34 of Gao’s fellow Xingtai residents had been confirmed dead, and 13 were still missing, the largest human toll for a single locality in last week’s storms. At least 200 people across China died in the heavy rains, including at least 130 in Hebei province, where Xingtai is located.

At a news conference Saturday night, Xingtai’s mayor and other officials offered their remorse for not doing more to protect residents and bowed to citizens in apology. But Gao is not satisfied.

“Villagers and I think the apology from the mayor is only a political show to reduce his political mistakes; it’s useless,” Gao said Sunday in a phone interview. “He didn’t do anything helpful to us. My house is destroyed, and some families even lost their sons and daughters. We need the government to help us and give us confidence to rebuild our home.”

On Sunday, four officials were suspended from their posts because of their inadequate performanc­e during the floods. Among them was Duan Xiaoyong, a senior Communist Party official in charge of an economic developmen­t zone in Xingtai that includes Daxian. On Sunday, President Xi Jinping and Prime Minister Li Keqiang dispatched State Councilor Wang Yong to Hebei province to oversee the disaster relief efforts.

At least 110 people remain missing in Hebei, and more than 300,000 people, including Gao, have been evacuated. In Xingtai, more than 28,000 homes were destroyed, 8,000 were seriously damaged and 16,000 were moderately damaged, the official New China News Agency reported Sunday.

Six reservoirs in Xingtai remained at critically high levels on Sunday, the agency added. More heavy rains are forecast for Monday and Tuesday.

Gao studies engineerin­g at the Hebei University of Water Resources and Electric Engineerin­g in Cangzhou. The warnings he received by phone, he said, were inadequate. “The messages didn’t mention … the coming flood,” he said.

Gao and others say they weren’t given nearly enough time to evacuate, and after they were caught up in the surge, there was almost no one to help save them.

“I saw only a few soldiers there to help us,” he said. “The rescue effort [immediatel­y after the flood] was very limited. Most of us rescued ourselves.”

Another villager, who would identify herself only by her surname, Yang, said in a phone interview Sunday that her 3-year-old niece was still missing. The toddler, named Zhang Ziyang, was swept out of her house with her parents about the same time as Gao. Since then, Yang and the girl’s parents have been searching for the child.

“We have no clue where she is, but we’ll search for her in the cornfields, in the mud and in the water until we find her,” she said.

Many of the victims in Daxian were children younger than 10, or elderly people.

Most of the residents of Daxian, Gao said, work for small manufactur­ers and engage in farming, mainly growing corn and wheat. His family farms and processes wood for making beds.

After the flood, his family took shelter in a public auditorium.

Later, his family members went to check on their home and belongings; Gao went to a hospital to be treated for bruises and injuries to his legs.

What comes next is unclear.

“Our house was destroyed. Our stock of wood boards were destroyed too,” he said. “The car might be OK, but it too will need to be repaired.”

julie.makinen@latimes.com Yingzhi Yang and Nicole Liu in The Times’ Beijing Bureau contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Photograph­s by European Pressphoto Agency ?? IN SHENYANG, people get around by raft this month after the worst flooding in years in northern China.
Photograph­s by European Pressphoto Agency IN SHENYANG, people get around by raft this month after the worst flooding in years in northern China.
 ??  ?? VOLUNTEERS pass supplies to a man in Xinhua village in Wuhan, central China, during f looding this month. More rain f looded Xingtai, to the north, last week.
VOLUNTEERS pass supplies to a man in Xinhua village in Wuhan, central China, during f looding this month. More rain f looded Xingtai, to the north, last week.
 ??  ?? THOUSANDS have been displaced by the f looding in China. An aerial view shows Xinhua village.
THOUSANDS have been displaced by the f looding in China. An aerial view shows Xinhua village.

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