/ 11 June 2007

China predicts further downpours after dozens die

Torrential rain has killed at least 71 people in floods, house collapses and rockslides across southern China with more heavy rain predicted for much of this week, state media said on Monday.

About 643 000 people were evacuated and 56 000 houses destroyed and 104 000 damaged, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing an unnamed official at the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

”We’ve got experience of floods, but I’ve never known a flood like this,” Zhong Shizhan, a resident of Mei county in Guangdong province, was quoted as saying by the Southern Metropolis daily.

The National Meteorological Centre forecast heavy rain south of the Yangtze, China’s longest river, and continued downpours in the south of the country until Thursday.

One official said the rain had stopped in the north-eastern Guangdong city of Meizhou where a local government website showed pictures of people standing waist deep in brown flood waters and others filling sandbags to keep the waters at bay.

Nearly nine million people had been affected. Thirteen people were missing and 3,43-billion yuan ($446,8-million) of damage caused.

A total of 350 000ha of crops had been damaged and 57 600 ha had been destroyed.

From Wednesday to Saturday, continuous rain, mudslides and floods hit the provinces of Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Jiangxi and Fujian.

China’s typhoon season is just getting under way in the south. Experts last month warned that the Yangtze could flood badly this year for the first time since 1998 when flooding killed more than 3 000 people.

Other parts of the country were reeling from intense heat, with the north-eastern province of Jilin seeing temperatures soar above 40 degrees Celsius, Xinhua added.

Jilin’s Tonyu county recorded temperatures of 41,6 degrees, the highest in local history, the report said. — Reuters