- At least 15 people were killed by seasonal torrents in mountainous areas in southwestern China.
- A 31-million-person vast mountainous region that has been designated as flood risk, according to the website of the local government.
- President Xi Jinping has called for greater efforts to protect people from extreme weather.
- The Chongqing floods have killed the most people. Thousands of people have been evacuated.
- News Agency reported that flooding has caused more than 85,000 people to be evacuated from one southwestern province, Sichuan.
- Every year, China is affected by seasonal flooding, especially in the semi-tropical south. However, some northern regions have reported this year’s worst floods.
Torrential rain has killed 15 people in the southwestern Chinese city of Chongqing, media reported on Wednesday, as President Xi Jinping called for greater efforts to protect the public from extreme weather. Heavy downpours have unleashed devastating floods and deadly mudslides in recent weeks, while hail storms and unusually high temperatures, which many people suspect is the result of global warming, have brought misery to many parts of the country.
In the sprawling city of Chongqing, floods have forced thousands from their homes, bridges have been destroyed, and homes and cars washed away. As well as the 15 people killed over recent days, four were missing as of early Wednesday, the state-run news agency reported, citing authorities.
The latest round of heavy rain has disrupted the lives of more than 130,000 people and damaged more than 7,500 hectares of crops, it reported. In Wanzhou district, northeast of Chongqing, floods have caused 227.8-million-yuan ($31.5 million) worth of economic losses, state broadcaster CCTV said.
Videos on social media showed raging rivers in towns and cities, and people being evacuated through waist-deep water. One clip showed rescuers breaking through a window security mesh to reach people trapped in an apartment.
Xi demanded that authorities at all levels give top priority to ensuring the safety of people and property, and he called on the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters and the ministries of emergency management and water resources to improve their coordination and warnings, Xinhua reported. The finance and emergency management ministries announced 320 million yuan in emergency funds to aid disaster relief, including for Chongqing.
The Ministry of Water Resources launched flood emergency responses for the Inner Mongolia region, and Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces, CCTV reported. Heavy rain is expected in those areas on Wednesday, state media reported.
As the crisis gets worse, the flood warning for Chongqing has been raised to level three from level four. According to images posted on the government website, workers were removing landslide-blocked roads and escorting villagers to safety in inflatable boats.
Every year, China is affected by seasonal flooding, especially in the semi-tropical south. However, some northern regions have reported this year’s worst floods.
Over 300 people died in the central province of Henan in 2021. On July 20 of that year, a record amount of rain fell on Zhengzhou, the provincial capital, turning the streets into rushing rivers and flooding at least a portion of a subway line. In 1998, China experienced its deadliest and most destructive floods, killing 4,150 people, most of them along the Yangtze River. Meanwhile, heatwaves that arrived earlier and lasted for more days than in decades are scorching much of China, including Beijing.
(With inputs from agencies)