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Sodden China battles to repair flood defences Beijing (AFP) June 27, 2010 China scrambled Sunday to repair water defences shattered by relentless rain, state media said, after flood-related disasters claimed the lives of 235 people this month. Officials in Jiangxi province said a major dyke that broke last week when the river running through Fuzhou city burst its banks, forcing the evacuation of 1.3 million people, had been fixed, the Xinhua news agency said. The breach was fixed "following around-the-clock repair efforts by hundreds of people", which would allow about 100,000 of the evacuees to return home sooner than expected, it said. Another, smaller breach was still being worked on, Xinhua said. Days of torrential rain in parts of eastern, central and southern China have affected 68.7 million people in 22 regions, the news agency cited the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters as saying. Rain continued to fall over the weekend on the hard-hit provinces and regions of Zhejiang, Fujian, Hunan, Guangdong and Guangxi, as well as in Jiangxi. By Sunday, the water level of major rivers in Jiangxi and Hunan provinces was receding as the rain eased off, the state headquarters said while urging no let-up in flood prevention work. At least 235 people have died and 109 gone missing in flooding and landslides triggered by relentless rains that have pounded China since June 13, according to the civil affairs ministry. Water Resources Minister Chen Lei warned regional officials on Saturday that their jobs were at stake if they failed to protect people from the effects of the deluge. The Southern Daily said over 600 millimetres (24 inches) of rain had fallen in Guangdong's Huilai county over a six-hour period on Friday, a 500-year record. This month's floods are among the worst in southern China since 1998, when over 3,600 people were killed and more than 20 million displaced, Xinhua said. At least 379 people have died in flooding in China this year, the government said, putting economic losses at 82.4 billion yuan (12.1 billion dollars).
earlier related report Minister of Water Resources Chen Lei warned regional officials that their jobs were at stake if they failed to protect people from the effects of the deluge, his ministry said on its website. "We must fully bring into play our monitoring and alert system and immediately announce disaster forecasts and thoroughly implement contingency plans and measures to avert mass disaster," Chen said in a Friday meeting. Workers and soldiers in central China's Hunan province meanwhile scrambled to shore up dykes as water reached record levels along the Xiang river as it passed through Changsha city, where over six million people live. After the Xiang surpassed danger marks by 2.5 metres (eight feet) Friday -- the highest water level in a decade -- flood prevention experts were bracing for "historic highs" on the river in coming days, China National Radio said. In the heart of Changsha, Zhuzizhou island, a famed tourist spot, was largely submerged by the swollen Xiang, it said. Television footage showed small towns and rural areas upriver from Changsha deluged with water as residents evacuated low-lying areas and scrambled to higher ground carting food and other supplies. At least 235 people have died and 109 gone missing in flooding and landslides triggered by torrential rains that have pounded south and central China since June 13, the civil affairs ministry said. The rains have caused 53 billion yuan (7.8 billion dollars) in economic losses, with over three million people forced to evacuate, it said. At least 379 people have died in flooding in China this year, with 141 people still missing, the government said. According to the national meteorological centre, rains continued to fall Saturday on the hard-hit provinces and regions of Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Fujian, Guangdong and Guangxi. The Southern Daily said over 600 millimetres (24 inches) of rain fell in Guangdong's Huilai county over a six-hour period on Friday, a 500-year record. Waters on the Han, Beijiang and Xijiang rivers in Guangdong all exceeded the danger warnings, the report said, forcing the evacuation of 67,000 people. "We must prevent areas from becoming water-logged and quickly evacuate those people in inundated areas," the paper quoted Guangdong governor Huang Huahua as saying. "All cities in eastern Guangdong must step up prevention work and prepare for more torrential rains." This month's floods are among the worst in south China since 1998, when over 3,600 people were killed and more than 20 million displaced, Xinhua said.
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Slum problem as Philippines braces for more floods Manila (AFP) June 25, 2010 Hundreds of thousands of slum dwellers remain living in flood-prone areas of the Philippine capital as the rainy season builds despite pledges to move them after a barrage of deadly storms last year. A month into the tropical nation's annual rainy season, entire communities that were hit hard by the disasters that killed about 1,000 people are vigorously resisting government efforts to move ... read more |
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