Thirty-two people have been killed and 12 missing as rainstorms hit
southwest China's Chongqing municipality, the Ministry of Civil Affairs reported
on Wednesday.
More than 5.16 million people were affected by the rainstorms, and 267,800
people were evacuated, according to the ministry.
More than 19,600 houses were destroyed, and 152,750 hectares of farmland were
damaged, with direct economic losses exceeding 2.1 billion yuan (US$282
million), said the ministry.
The city of Chongqing received 266.6 mm of rainfall from Monday night to
Tuesday afternoon, the largest volume since records began in 1892, the municipal
meteorological bureau said.
The previous record was set on July 21, 1996, when Chongqing received 206.1
mm of rainfall, it said.
Earlier reports said the rain triggered landslides and mud-rock flows in 22
of Chongqing's 40 counties and districts in the southern, central and western
parts.
Rainstorms worst in 115 years
Torrential rain and lightning storms considered the
worst in 115 years hit southwest China's Chongqing Municipality since yesterday.
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Up to a thousand local residents are trapped
in knee-deep flood water in Bishan County, southwest China's Chongqing
Municipality on July 17, 2007. Continuous heavy rainstorm has turned the
county into an "isolated island" with disrupted transportation,
communication, and electricity supply. [Chongqing News]
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About 113,100 people were
evacuated from their homes, Xinhua news agency reported. Five people were
missing.
In the city's urban areas, rainfall reached a record of about 266.6
millimeters, triggering landslides and mud-rock flows in 22 of its 40 counties
and districts in the southern, central and western parts while the temperature
dived 7.8 degrees Celsius, the Oriental Morning Post reported.
The National Headquarters on Inspection of Flood Control and Drought Relief
has enacted a third-level emergency plan and sent a work team to Chongqing to
cope with flooding in the nation's southwestern areas, according to Xinhua news
agency.
The country has four levels of plans for floods with the first level the most
serious.
A total of 41,672 lightning bolts were recorded in Chongqing from early
morning to 4pm yesterday, causing 48 power lines to go down, more than 300 power
faults and more than 200 fires across the city, the report said.
The heavy rains also destroyed more than 10,000 houses and ruined 118,060
hectares of crops, causing losses of more than 863 million yuan (US$114.1
million).
Traffic in the city was almost paralyzed due to the rain as thousands of cars
and buses were trapped on roads submerged in water and most gas stations closed
for safety reasons, the report said.
Almost all trains coming in and out of the city were canceled due to alerts
about landslides. Chongqing's only light railway had to suspend service for
about three hours after its electric power system was experienced problems when
a tree, hit by lightning, was knocked down, the report said.
There's no relief in sight.
More rain was forecast to fall in the city in the next three days, the
Chongqing Meteorological Administration said, which released its first red alert
for rainstorms this year yesterday.
China is now struggling to handle rainstorms in Sichuan, Guizhou, Anhui,
Hubei provinces, as well as the Xinjiang Uygur and the Inner Mongolia autonomous
regions.
Jiangsu Province, downstream of the Huaihe, is also expected to experience
the worst flooding since 2003, according to previous reports.
Premier Wen Jiabao asked the nation to prepare for the flood situation to
worsen as the country enters the main rainy season.
The central government has allocated 232 million yuan to help flood-hit areas
around the Yangtze River and the Huaihe River.