Gulf Today

China braces for typhoon, villagers f lee fresh f loods

Death toll rises to 51; nearly half a million residents evacuated; floods caused billions of dollars in losses: Henan

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Villagers were evacuated over makeshit bridges Friday as floods submerged swathes of central China following a historic deluge that claimed at least 56 lives — while an approachin­g typhoon threatened to dump more rain on the stricken area.

More than 495,000 people have been evacuated, said the Henan government, with the flooding causing billions of dollars in losses.

Millions have been affected by the floods in Henan province, which have trapped people for days without fresh food or water and blocked roads as they breached embankment­s, caking large areas in thick ankle-deep mud.

The death toll rose to 51, with provincial officials telling reporters on Friday that casualties were still being counted.

Adding to the misery, Typhoon In-fa is forecast to bring further torrential downpours to parts of Henan in the coming days, state media said.

In the worst-hit city of Zhengzhou, firefighte­rs on Friday continued to pump muddy water from tunnels, including from a subway where at least a dozen people drowned inside a train earlier in the week as a year’s worth of rainfall fell in just three days.

Overnight, heavy rain saw floods surge northwards to the city of Xinxiang and surroundin­g areas, where vast tracts of farmland were inundated and the town cut off as the Wei River burst its banks.

“We were at my grandmothe­r’s and then the water suddenly rose the building was surrounded by water,” said Sun Haocun in the town of Weihui, who was rescued in a dinghy by a team of volunteers.

AFP saw residents wading through water that reached waist height, staggering with dogs, bicycles and bags of possession­s.

Teams of rescuers in life jackets helped residents to safety, with several elderly people in wheelchair­s lited above the surging water through streets of shutered shops.

“The resistance of the water is strong, especially when the water level is high and reaches up to the neck,” said one exhausted volunteer Wang Kai, pushing an inflatable canoe.

Aerial footage showed rescuers using temporary bridges to move hundreds of residents to safety, with tree tops poking above the water the only sign of land for miles.

Liang Long, an employee at a hotel in a city neighbouri­ng Xinxiang, said hundreds had arrived seeking refuge since Thursday aternoon and through the night.

“Their villages have been flatened with nothing let,” he said.

The hotel, about 20km from the worst-hit areas, was still receiving “continuous” calls for help, Liang added.

“There are many people and our hotel’s food is running low,” he said.

Videos shared on social media have provided a window into the destructiv­e power of the floods, which tossed cars into piles and sucked pedestrian­s towards storm drains.

Harrowing footage from rush-hour passengers trapped inside the subway, where waters rose from ankle to neck height, pinballed across China’s Twiter-like Weibo as people questioned why the undergroun­d network had been allowed to operate during an unpreceden­ted storm.

Meteorolog­ists are now anxiously watching the progress of Typhoon In-fa, which has already dumped heavy rainfall on Taiwan and the east coast of China and is expected to make landfall from Sunday in an area home to tens of millions of people.

“Ater landing, In-fa may circulate in the east China region, bringing long periods of extremely heavy rainfall,” the National Meteorolog­ical Center said.

During high tides “coastal areas should guard against the combined impact of wind, rain and tides,” it added, warning the public to prepare for a major weather event.

Questions have been asked about how China’s bulging cities could be beter prepared for freak weather events, which experts say are happening with increased frequency and intensity due to climate change.

Henan province is criss-crossed by rivers, dams and reservoirs, many constructe­d decades ago to manage the flow of floodwater and irrigate the agricultur­al region.

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People wade through floodwater­s following a heavy rainfall in Zhengzhou on Friday.
Reuters ↑ People wade through floodwater­s following a heavy rainfall in Zhengzhou on Friday.

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