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Rains leave 26 dead, 45 missing in China's southwest
Beijing (AFP) Nov 3, 2008 Massive downpours in southwest China have killed 26 people -- many buried in landslides -- left 45 missing and damaged thousands of homes, the government and reports said Monday. Rains that have drenched Yunnan province since October 24 have triggered a series of landslides in the mountainous region, which borders on the Himalayas, affecting up to 410,000 people, the provincial government said on its website. In the hardest hit area, Chuxiong prefecture, four more bodies were found Monday bringing the toll there to 20 confirmed dead and 41 missing, Xinhua news agency said. "We must ensure that those in disaster areas have food to eat, clothes to wear and a place to stay with clean water and medical aid," Chuxiong vice prefectural head Fa Yubing said in a statement. "We must ensure that students can attend classes and that no epidemics break out in disaster areas." More than 1,000 homes have collapsed and some 2,300 others were damaged in the mud and rock slides, with rescue teams and local officials frantically seeking to ascertain the exact number of dead and missing. Roads, electricity and telecommunications have all been disrupted, while outlying regions have reported damage to schools and medical clinics. With more rain forecast for the coming two days, rescue efforts will likely face continued difficulties, the government said. The torrential rains have also hit the provincial capital of Kunming, where four people were reported dead and 1,000 people have been evacuated, it added. The two other fatalities occurred in Lincang city. Yunnan sits just to the south of Sichuan province, where an 8.0-magnitude earthquake left over 87,000 people dead or missing in May this year. In September, 276 people were killed in northern China's Shanxi province when an industrial waste reservoir situated on a mountainside collapsed and engulfed a village in a sea of mud, rocks and mine debris. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Share This Article With Planet Earth
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