Rainstorms have whipped through southern China claiming 29 lives, with floods
and landslides destroying thousands of homes and forcing the evacuation of more
than 100,000 people, Xinhua News Agency said.
Seven residents of Meizhou city in Guangdong province, just north of Hong
Kong, were killed in landslides over the past three days. Earlier 22 fatalities
were confirmed in neighboring Fujian.
There were fears worse was to come with another 10 days of heavy rains
forecast to drench the provinces south of the Yangtze river, a vast area that is
home to hundreds of millions of people, said the report.
"Maximum rainfall may reach more than 200 millimeters (eight inches) in a few
areas," an unnamed Beijing weather official warned.
The non-stop rain, so far 20 percent worse compared with the same period last
year, has forced the evacuation of more than 50,000 people in Guangdong, plus
another 50,000 in Fujian, Xinhua said.
In Fujian, about 19,000 homes have been destroyed, while in Guangdong
hundreds of buildings are reported to have collapsed, Xinhua said.
The entire town of Chayang in Guangdong was flooded after officials released
water from two reservoirs that had been brimming with a month's worth of
precipitation.
As a result, the streets of Chayang were submerged in four meters (13 feet)
of water, forcing 5,000 people to be evacuated.
"It just poured and had lasted for about a month," said Li Zhonghong, a local
county government official, explaining why the water from the reservoirs had to
be released.
Overall, 59 people have died in floods so far this year in the south of
China.
Since serious flooding of the Yangtze River in 1998, China has spent billions
of dollars on flood mitigation.
Major rivers have been brought under greater control and early warning
systems have been put in place, but flash floods and landslides caused by rains
continue to cause major damage.
While part of China was being soaked, other parts were experiencing severe
droughts, highlighting the nation's basic geographic dilemma -- the imbalance
between a dripping wet south and a parched north.
A prolonged drought in the north Chinese provinces has left 9.5 million
people short of sufficient drinking water, said E Jingping, head of
the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters.
The same dry spell has affected 12.1 million hectares (30 million acres) of
farmland and resulted in water shortages for 8.7 million head of
livestock.