At least 25 people were killed after torrential rains hit northwest
China's Shaanxi Province over the past four days, bringing the
death toll in this flooded region to 48.
It included the death of 23 people in Shangluo City as of Aug.
1, according to local flood control authorities.
At least 65 people remained missing. Of the total, 28 were
washed away by torrential floods in Shangluo in July and 37 were
engulfed by floods after downpours stroke many cities and counties
in central and southern Shaanxi on Tuesday, according to the
provincial flood control office.
In the city of Ankang, rain-triggered floods have affected
420,000 people and toppled down more than 9,600 houses, resulting
in 233 million yuan (US$30.8 million) in economic losses.
The provincial government has launched emergency disaster-relief
schemes to help the affected people.
In another tragedy in southwest China's Sichuan Province, at
least 10 people were killed and two missing as a mud-rock flow hit
a hydropower station late Friday.
An unexpected mud-rock flow hit a hydroelectric power station
under construction in Ya'an City around midnight Friday, engulfing
a group of construction workers who managed to escape. Three were
injured.
About 150 soldiers and police officers are still busy searching
the missing.
In the eastern province of Shandong, 12 large and medium-sized
reservoirs opened spillways on Saturday due to continuous
rainstorms since Thursday, the strongest in this flooding
season.
Water levels in another 18 large and medium-sized reservoirs
have exceeded the warning lines, according to local flood control
authority.
Precipitations averaged 62 mm in Shandong. The cities of
Qingdao, Yantai and Weihai recorded maximum rainfalls of 100
mm.
Across the country, 1,279 people died and 239 went missing in
natural disasters in the first seven months of this year, figures
released by the Ministry of Civil Affairs earlier this week
showed.
In July, when frequent rains and floods were reported, 712
people died and 163 went missing.
(Xinhua News Agency August 12, 2007)