China Daily (Hong Kong)

Firefighte­rs help flood victims

Those killed among dozens who have died as rains wallop southern region

- By HUANG ZHILING in Chengdu and ZHOU LIHUA in Wuhan Contact the writers at huangzhili­ng@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

The death toll from a rainstorm in Mianning county in Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture in Sichuan province rose to 12 on Monday, with 10 people reported missing, the county government informatio­n office said.

The rainstorm started at 6 pm on Friday and continued until 1 am on Saturday, causing floods and wreaking havoc in many villages.

Dide Keyizi, a Yi resident of Damawu village in Yihai town, rode a sanlunche — a large, motorized tricycle — with eight family members to flee the flood on Friday night.

The vehicle was overturned by the flood. He and his mother survived, and his 11-year-old daughter was rescued by a neighbor after she clung to a cherry tree in the neighbor’s courtyard. But the other five family members were swept away by the water, said Lu Zheng, Party chief of Yihai.

Caogu village in Yihai was one of the areas hardest hit by the flood, which washed out road sections, collapsed houses, cut telecommun­ication signals and destroyed crops.

Search and rescue personnel paid a house call to each of the more than 600 families in the village. More than 3,000 people from those families will be relocated to three centralize­d resettleme­nt sites, Lu said.

Floods in southern China have affected more than 12 million people, with 78 people killed or missing and 729,000 evacuated, as well as more than 8,000 houses toppled and 97,000 houses damaged since the beginning of this month, with direct economic losses of nearly 26 billion yuan ($3.7 billion), according to the Ministry of Emergency Management.

China’s National Meteorolog­ical Center on Monday issued a blue alert for rainstorms as heavy downpours continue to inundate vast stretches of the country.

From Monday morning to Tuesday morning, heavy rain and rainstorms are expected in the provinces of Zhejiang, Anhui, Hubei, Jiangxi, Hunan, Guizhou, Yunnan, Sichuan, Hebei and Shandong, the National Meteorolog­ical Center said.

Some of these regions will see up to 7 centimeter­s of hourly precipitat­ion accompanie­d by thundersto­rms and strong winds, the center said.

China has a four-tier color-coded weather warning system, with red representi­ng the most severe, followed by orange, yellow and blue.

On Saturday and Sunday, Hubei witnessed its largest rainfall this year, and water swelled in its rivers, according to the Hubei provincial government informatio­n office.

At 8 am on Monday, the water level of the Yichang section of the Yangtze River rose by 2.62 meters. The water level of 1,081 reservoirs in the province exceed the flood limit.

As part of the aftermath of the rainstorm-induced floods, the Mulan Great Lake, a famous 5-A level scenic area in Wuhan, was closed on Sunday and Monday

Wuhan, which lies on the Yangtze, was hit by the country’s last major floods in 1998, which killed more than 3,000 people and left 14 million displaced.

 ?? CHENG XUELI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Firefighte­rs attend to a girl’s injuries on Sunday at a shelter for people affected by floods in Mianning county, Sichuan province. As of Monday, at least 12 people were reported killed and 10 missing in floods caused by steady downpours on Friday and Saturday, the county government said. Heavy rains continued to hit parts of southern China on Monday.
CHENG XUELI / FOR CHINA DAILY Firefighte­rs attend to a girl’s injuries on Sunday at a shelter for people affected by floods in Mianning county, Sichuan province. As of Monday, at least 12 people were reported killed and 10 missing in floods caused by steady downpours on Friday and Saturday, the county government said. Heavy rains continued to hit parts of southern China on Monday.
 ?? ZHENG JIAYU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Three Gorges Dam, the world’s biggest hydroelect­ric power project, discharges floodwater­s for the first time this year in Yichang, Hubei province, on Monday.
ZHENG JIAYU / FOR CHINA DAILY Three Gorges Dam, the world’s biggest hydroelect­ric power project, discharges floodwater­s for the first time this year in Yichang, Hubei province, on Monday.

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