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Friday, August 16, 2002 - Web posted at 10:02:33 am GMT Around 200 feared dead as China flood misery continuesBEIJING, Aug 16 (AFP) - About 200 people are feared dead in floods and landslides around China during recent days as the country continues to be battered by brutally destructive summer rains, officials and reports said Friday. Among the dead are at least 28 people buried alive as they slept when homes were destroyed by a landslide in the southwestern province of Yunnan. A further 35 people are missing, officials said. Also, at least 108 are known to have died in floods which inundated vast swathes of the central province of Hunan from last week, caused by rain described as the heaviest to hit the region in years. Around 1,000 people have died in floods around China this year, a figure based on official statistics and subsequent reports. The vast majority were killed during the summer as torrential rain struck a series of regions around the country, triggering landslides and swelling rivers above danger levels. In Hunan, around 38 million people have now been affected by flooding, an official with the provincial Civil Affairs Bureau told Nampa-AFP. It is feared the death toll of 108 could rise still further, with more heavy rain forecast for Friday and the weekend, according to the Central Meteorological Bureau in Beijing. Hunan's government has called in the army to help evacuate flood victims and rebuild roads washed away by the torrents, the state Xinhua news agency reported. The Yunnan landslide, a torrent of mud and rocks caused by heavy rains, swept through villages in Xinping county at about 4:00 am on Wednesday (2000 GMT Tuesday), an official from the anti-flood office in nearby Yuxi city said. Twenty-eight bodies had been found, with another 35 people missing and 23 injured, 11 of them seriously, said the official, who gave his name as Zhou. A total of 611 homes were destroyed in the deluge, he said. "The people who died were crushed underneath their houses as they collapsed. It was a massive landslide," he said. Emergency teams have been sent from the provincial capital of Kunming, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) to the north, to search for the missing, Xinhua reported. Locals have been placed on alert for further landslides as the region is set to be pounded still further by heavy rain, local meteorologists told the agency. Quilts, clothes and food have already been delivered to the stricken areas, and the Chinese Red Cross has also sent officials to help with rescue and relief efforts. The landslide caused millions of dollars of damage, including the destruction of tobacco plants which form the livelihood of people in the area, which is home to the Yi and Dai ethnic minorities, Xinhua said. Adding still further to the death toll, officials have announced that 16 people are now known to have died in an earlier landslide in Yunnan following the discovery of 14 more bodies, Xinhua said overnight. Rescue workers were continuing to search for others still missing and believed buried in the large pile of mud and rocks which slid down a hillside Monday evening, burying seven households in a small village in Yanjin county as well as some workers repairing a nearby road. A total of 33 people are feared buried by the landslide, a local official told Nampa-AFP earlier. National anti-flood officials have expressed fears that this summer's flooding could prove even worse than in 1998, when China experienced some of the most severe floods in its recent history, killing about 4,000 people.- Nampa-AFP |
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