Fears of disease have followed the
devastating floods that killed over 200 people in the last few
days, though reports of three typhoid cases in the central province
of Hunan were denied by local officials in yesterday's
Chongqing Morning News.
Duan Zhigao, from Shaoyang City's
Disease Prevention and Control Center, said that there had been one
case of typhoid in Xinshao County but that it predated the floods,
having been diagnosed on May 22.
Local governments have stockpiled
inoculations to be given free of charge to flood victims.
The State Flood Control and Drought
Relief Headquarters said yesterday that no more flood casualties
have been reported since it and the Ministry of Civil Affairs
released an updated death toll of 204 and 79 missing on
Saturday.
At that time, Vice-Premier Hui
Liangyu, in charge of the headquarters, urged "the full
implementation of all anti-flood and drought measures so that human
casualties and property losses can be mitigated and the safety of
key cities and communication lines guaranteed."
As of last night, 17.1 million
people in 16 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions had
been affected by floods. An estimated 1.8 million hectares of
arable land has been affected and 137,900 houses destroyed by the
heavy rains and subsequent landslides.
In stark contrast, some areas, such
as southwest China's Yunnan Province, are suffering from serious
drought, with over 6.6 million hectares of farmland in 11 provinces
affected, and 11.1 million people and 6.4 million livestock
experiencing a shortage of drinking water.
Meteorologists warned that flooding
on the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River are likely to
worsen in the next ten days as 220 millimeters more rain is
predicted to fall.
Xiao Ziniu, deputy director of the
National Meteorological Center, said "rainstorms will sweep over
the provinces of Guizhou, Hunan, Jiangxi, Hubei, Sichuan and the
municipality of Chongqing" this week.
(China Daily, Xinhua News
Agency, June 6, 2005)
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