Floods that have swept across China
since late last week had claimed 536 lives and left 137 missing by
4 PM yesterday, the Office of State Flood Control and Drought
Relief Headquarters said.
Twenty-two provinces, autonomous
regions and municipalities have been hit, causing economic losses
of 20.4 billion yuan (US$2.5 billion).
More than 44.3 million people have
been affected and more than 31 million hectares of crops
damaged.
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and
the provinces of Guangdong and Fujian have suffered the worst,
according to the office.
In Guangxi, floods have damaged 91
reservoirs and 53.4 kilometers of dikes. In Wuzhou City, river
water levels on the Xijiang rose to 26.75 meters when the flood
crest came at 12:00 AM on Thursday, 9.45 meters above the warning
line.
Wuzhou and some other cities in
Guangxi have decided to postpone senior high school entrance
examinations as a result.
Rainstorms in Guangdong caused the
roadbed of the Longchuan-Huizhou section of the Beijing-Kowloon
Railway to collapse on Tuesday. Transportation has not yet been
resumed and repair work is still underway.
Torrential rains and ensuing floods
in the northern part of Fujian forced Xiamen Railway Station to
suspend all services after some tracks going through the city were
rendered unusable.
A task force has been dispatched by
the State Council to floods-hit areas in Fujian to direct local
rescue and relief work.
Jia Zhibang, head of the task force
and Vice Minister of Civil Affairs, warned local officials to keep
alert for possible mud and rock flows and landslides.
(Xinhua News Agency June 24,
2005)
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