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Dams Strained as Rains Pound Flooded NE China

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A picture taken on August 5, 2010 shows Fengman Reservoir, the largest reservoir on the Songhua River in Jilin Province. [Xinhua] 

Continuous rains in northeast China's Jilin Province are raising pressures on already strained reservoirs, many of which have had to discharge water or risk embankment breaches.

Rainfall reached 204 mm over the previous 24 hours as of 8:00 AM Thursday in central Jilin, the provincial meteorological station said.

Rainstorms began to pour in Gongzhuling City and Lishu County at 2:00 PM Thursday, with the highest rainfall reaching 121 mm in Lishu, according to the station.

Constant rains had forced seven of the 25 medium and large reservoirs in Jilin City, including Fengman, Baishan and Xingxingshao, to discharge water, and their levels were falling, according to Jilin municipal government.

At Fengman Reservoir, the largest reservoir on the Songhua River, the speed of the discharge had reached 4,500 cubic meters per second, according to the provincial flood control and drought relief headquarters.

Thousands of people had been deployed to watch embankments and dams, and a 24-hour monitoring system had been set up to ensure the safety of reservoirs, said Wang Rulin, governor of Jilin Province.

In Liuhe County, Tonghua City, 15,702 residents had been evacuated to 10 safe locations as the county braced for the second wave of floods, according to the county's flood control headquarters.

In Linjiang City which borders the Democratic People's Republic of Korea along the Yalu River, three townships had been cut off by rain-triggered floods and mudflows, and 38,000 residents were relocated from other parts of the city as more torrential rains were forecast for the next two days, said Yin Xiangmei, deputy mayor of the city.

Floods on Saturday cut the drinking water supply to more than 68,000 city residents for more than 120 hours.

Although tap water supplies resumed at 5:00 PM Wednesday, it would take at least three days for the water to clear so it was potable, said Zou Jichun, manager of the tap water company.

Many water meters needed to be replaced as they were broken or blocked by the mud and sand in the water, Zou said.

The city's fire trucks had been mobilized to provide drinking water to the public, and two mountain springs in the suburbs were serving as backup water sources.

The Jilin provincial government had allocated 270 million yuan (US$39.87 million) for flood control, disaster relief and reconstruction as of Wednesday, said Jilin Assistant Governor Wang Huawen Thursday.

Heavy rains had also hit nearby Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Inner Mongolia, Hebei, and Shandong, with Liaoning, Shandong and Hebei issuing torrential rain alerts.

In Xingcheng, Huludao City, of Liaoning, 10 workers doing dredging work in a river were stranded on an island before they were rescued.

National Road 102 from Beijing to Shuangcheng City, Heilongjiang Province, was disrupted at the section in Xingcheng, and workers were rushing to repair it, according to Huludao city government.

(Xinhua News Agency August 6, 2010)