At least eight people were killed by flooding that affected millions on Monday.
Heavy downpours pounded parts of Central and Southwest China and caused swelled rivers.
Flooding has worsened with heavy rain in Central China's Hunan Province since last weekend. Some 2.6 million people in the northwestern part of the province were badly affected, said reports yesterday.
By Monday, nearly one third of Huaihua's urban area in Hunan was underwater, with the deepest water level measuring 5 to 6 metres.
Five separate county towns in Huaihua were flooded at one point, local media said.
Local officials said Huaihua was hit by 970 landslides, in which two people were killed. So far, some 102,000 people have been moved to safer high ground.
The floods have also been serious in northwestern Hunan's Zhangjiajie, Changde and Yiyang with 284 local roads blocked.
In Anhui Province, the flood-prone Huaihe River saw its first crest this year approaching Wangjiaba yesterday due to heavy rains upstream.
Local flood control departments were closely monitoring water levels as the peak passed through Wangjiaba last night, the most important sluice gate, which is used to control flash floods upstream and downstream of the rivers' trunk stream.
"The consecutive rainfall is to leave areas south of the Yangtze River as of today," weathermen from the Central Meteorological Observatory predicted.
However, "heavy rains are likely to go on in Southwest China's Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in the next three days," they said yesterday.
In Southwest China's Yunnan Province, the water level in the Liuku part of the Nujiang River in the Lisu Autonomous Prefecture had receded below the warning line.
By Monday afternoon, floods had killed six people and 11 were still missing. Some 7,570 were badly affected, 3,638 houses were toppled and 310 hectares of fields were submerged.
Rainfall since July 1 caused flooding in the prefecture.
More than 2,000 soldiers and armed police worked with local residents to fight floods along the swollen Nujiang River for six days and nights.
President Hu Jintao ordered flood control departments to make full preparations for more possible floods, Xinhua reported on Monday.
Some 60,000 residents in Henan Province were transferred to safe places during the past few days after sections of the swelling Lihe River overflowed and parts of the embankment burst.
The State Flood-Control and Drought Relief Headquarters and the Ministry of Civil Affairs have allocated 24 million yuan (nearly US$3 million) in emergency funds and provided 1,000 tents to areas hit by floods in Henan.
(China Daily July 21, 2004)
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