GUANGZHOU, Sat.:
Six people died and four were missing after rainstorms devastated part of southern China’s Guangdong Province and triggered the biggest river flood in nearly half a century, officials said on Saturday.
From 7pm last evening to 7am today, 103 monitoring sites across the province reported precipitation of more than 100 mm, with the heaviest — 269 mm — in Duanfen Town, Jiangmen City, the Guangdong Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters said.
The deaths included four in Shenzhen and two in Shaoguan. The missing included two in Heyuan and one each in Qingyuan and Shaoguan, XINHUA news agency quoted the officials as saying.
Some 100,000 residents in Lechang City were evacuated after the city was flooded by the swollen Wujiang River.
On the river’s Lechang stretch, the flood crested at 91.12 m, 3.92 m higher than the alert level at the midnight on Friday.
The river’s water level has begun to fall slowly.
At 7 am today, the Xijiang River in Guangdong also surpassed alert levels in many sections, according to the headquarters.
In Shenzhen, a heavy rainstorm on Friday caused transportation havoc. The city had more than 200 mm of rain, with up to 500 mm falling in Baoan District, according to its flood control authorities.
More than 300 locations in the city were submerged. Reservoirs had to open sluices to drop the water levels.
Traffic was restored on Saturday.
In Liuzhou City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, more than 50,000 residents were displaced after rainstorms moved into the area Thursday.
Nearly 800,000 people in Liuzhou were affected by floods, and 93 primary and middle schools had to suspend classes.
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