Authorities warned of landslides in southern China on Thursday and were 
watching swollen dams and rivers after rains triggered by Typhoon Kaemi killed 
at least 15 people and left more than 60 missing, state media said. 
 
 
 |  An old woman points at the wreckage left by 
 tropical storm Kaemi yesterday at Gantang Village in Central China's Hunan 
 Province. [newsphoto]
 | 
Kaemi weakened into a 
tropical depression after sweeping across China's southeastern coast on Tuesday, 
but downpours it brought soaked at least four provinces, all of which are still 
reeling from damage by tropical storm Bilis. 
Six people were killed when flash floods along a mountainside hit a military 
barracks in the province of Jiangxi, Xinhua news agency said. About 38 troops 
and their families were missing, it added. 
Two girls -- aged nine and six -- died in southern Guangdong province after 
their house collapsed under a landslide. 
Both incidents occurred in the early hours of Wednesday when the victims were 
probably sleeping, Xinhua said. 
A further seven people were killed, mostly by floods, in Jiangxi's 
mountainous south, Xinhua said. About 20 were missing and roads and 
communications had been disrupted in some areas. 
In neighbouring Hunan province, hundreds of thousands of people were 
relocated as streets in the city of Chenzhou, where Bilis killed almost 200 this 
month, were flooded and at least three were missing, Xinhua said. 
In Fujian province, where Kaemi made landfall after sweeping Taiwan, a levee 
collapsed, threatening the lives of more than 20,000 people in six villages, it 
said, adding that emergency repair work was under way. 
Rain was likely to continue in the provinces through Friday, China's Central 
Meteorological Office said on its Web site (www.nmc.gov.cn). 
The Meteorological Office said Kaemi carried less rain than Bilis but caused 
fresh damage in areas already hit by the storm that killed 612 people and left 
200 missing in southern China, mostly in the provinces of Hunan, Guangdong and 
Fujian. 
Tropical storms and typhoons frequently strike Taiwan island, Japan, the 
Philippines and southern China during a season that lasts from early summer to 
late autumn.