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At least 25 people dead as Chinese province hit by heaviest rains in 1,000 years
2021-07-22 00:00:00.0     环球邮报-世界     原网页

       Open this photo in gallery

       Residents wade through flood waters amid heavy rainfall in Zhengzhou, Henan province, China, on July 20.

       CHINA DAILY/Reuters

       At least 25 people have died in China’s flood-stricken central province of Henan, a dozen of them in a subway line in its capital Zhengzhou, and more rains are forecast for the region.

       About 100,000 people have been evacuated in Zhengzhou, an industrial and transport hub, where rail and road links were disrupted. Dams and reservoirs have swelled to warning levels and thousands of troops are taking part in the rescue effort in the province.

       Twelve people died and more than 500 were pulled to safety after a subway tunnel flooded, state media reported, while social media images showed train commuters immersed in chest-deep waters in the dark and one station reduced to a large brown pool.

       In photos: Flooding in Henan province, China

       “The water reached my chest,” a survivor wrote on social media. “I was really scared, but the most terrifying thing was not the water, but the diminishing air supply in the carriage.”

       The rain halted bus services in the city of 12 million people about 650 kilometres southwest of Beijing, said a resident surnamed Guo, who had to spend the night at his office.

       “That’s why many people took the subway, and the tragedy happened,” he told Reuters.

       Passengers on a subway in Zhengzhou, the capital of China’s central Henan province, were trapped by flood waters that reached their necks. A dozen people died in the flooded subway after the city was drenched by what are being called the heaviest rains for 1,000 years. The Globe and Mail

       At least 25 people have died in the torrential rains that have lashed the province since last weekend, with seven missing, officials told a news conference on Wednesday.

       Media said the dead included four residents of the city of Gongyi, located on the banks of the Yellow River like Zhengzhou, following the widespread collapse of homes and structures because of the rains.

       More rain is forecast across Henan for the next three days, and the People’s Liberation Army has sent more than 5,700 soldiers and personnel to help with search and rescue.

       From Saturday to Tuesday, 617.1 millimetres of rain fell in Zhengzhou, almost the equivalent of its annual average of 640.8 mm.

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       The three days of rain matched a level seen only “once in a thousand years,” the Zhengzhou weather bureau said.

       RUSSIA

       MONGOLIA

       Henan

       province

       Beijing

       CHINA

       Zhengzhou

       INDIA

       0

       800

       KM

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL, SOURCE: TILEZEN;

       OPENSTREETMAP CONTRIBUTORS

       RUSSIA

       MONGOLIA

       Henan

       province

       Beijing

       CHINA

       Zhengzhou

       INDIA

       0

       800

       KM

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL, SOURCE: TILEZEN;

       OPENSTREETMAP CONTRIBUTORS

       RUSSIA

       KAZAKHSTAN

       MONGOLIA

       Sea of Japan

       Beijing

       & East Sea

       Henan

       province

       CHINA

       Zhengzhou

       East China

       Sea

       INDIA

       MYANMAR

       Philippine

       Sea

       South China

       Sea

       THAILAND

       PHILIPPINES

       0

       800

       KM

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL, SOURCE: TILEZEN; OPENSTREETMAP CONTRIBUTORS

       Like recent heatwaves in the United States and Canada and extreme flooding seen in western Europe, the rainfall in China was almost certainly linked to global warming, scientists told Reuters.

       “Such extreme weather events will likely become more frequent in the future,” said Johnny Chan, a professor of atmospheric science at City University of Hong Kong.

       “What is needed is for governments to develop strategies to adapt to such changes,” he added, referring to authorities at city, province and national levels.

       Many train services were suspended across Henan, a logistics hub with a population of about 100 million. Highways have also been closed and flights delayed or cancelled.

       By Wednesday, media said food and water supplies had run out for hundreds of passengers stranded on a train that had stopped just beyond the city limits of Zhengzhou two days earlier.

       Roads were severely flooded in a dozen cities of the province.

       “Flood prevention efforts have become very difficult,” President Xi Jinping said in a statement broadcast by state television.

       Dozens of reservoirs and dams breached danger levels.

       Local authorities said the rainfall had caused a 20-metre breach in the Yihetan dam in the city of Luoyang west of Zhengzhou, and that the dam could collapse at any time.

       In Zhengzhou itself, where about 100,000 people have been evacuated, the Guojiazui reservoir had been breached but there was no dam failure yet.

       Chinese companies, insurers and a state-backed bank said they had offered donations and emergency aid to local governments in Henan amounting to 1.935-billion yuan (US$299-million).

       Mass flooding has left terrifying scenes in China's central Henan province, where at least a dozen were killed when their subway line flooded. Reuters

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关键词: GLOBE     subway     China's     flooded     rains     Zhengzhou     Henan province    
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