China Info Travel

Rain-fuelled Disasters Claim Eight

 | Home | China Travel |China Hotels | Silk Road | Yangtze River | China Cities |
China Hotels Reservation:
China Hotels
China Hotels Reservation
Silk Road
Silkroad
Silkroad Gansu
Silkroad Ningxia
Silkroad Qinghai
Silkroad Shaanxi
Silkroad Xinjiang
Yangtze River
Yangtzeriver
Yangtzeriver Dam
Yangtzeriver Qutang
Yangtzeriver Wu
Yangtzeriver Xiling
Yangtzeriver Yichang
China Cities
Beijing
Chengde
Chengdu
Chongqing
Dali
Dalian
Datong
Guangzhou
Guilin
Guiyang
Hangzhou
Harbin
Huangshan
Jinan
Kunming
Lhasa
Lijiang
Luoyang
Nanjing
Panda
Qingdao
Sanya
Shanghai
Shenzhen
Suzhou
Tianjin
Urumqi
Wuhan
Wuxi
Xiamen
Xian
China Travel
China Airport
China Airport Hotels
China Asia Travel
China Beijing Tour
China Cities Tour
China Festival Travel
China Great Wall
China Holiday
China Hot Destinations
China Industry
China International Hotels
China Province Tour
China Province Travel
China Reservations
China Star level Hotels
China Tourism
China Tourism Festival
china travel
China Travel News
China Trips
Chinese Hotels
Chinese Tourism
Chinese Tours
Chinese Travel
Chinese Travelers
Sino Travel
Tourism China Hotels
Tourism China Travel
Rain-fuelled Disasters Claim Eight

Eight people were killed and four missing after flood and rainstorm-related disasters struck Southwest China's Sichuan Province and Central China's Hubei Province, according to Agency.

Rainstorm-triggered disasters, including mountain torrents and landslides, killed five people in the eastern part of Sichuan on Saturday and yesterday, leaving two missing, local disaster relief officials said on Sunday.

In Dazhou, three women were confirmed dead after they were swept away by mountain floods on Saturday while crossing a river.

Ren Tao, vice-director of the Disaster Reduction Office of the government of Bazhong, said about 890,000 people were affected by the storm in rural areas of the city over the past two days, where rainfall exceeded 100 millimetres in 13 hours and reached up to 179 millimetres in Tongjiang and Nanjiang counties and Bazhou region. Two people were killed and two were missing, the official said.

In another development, a sudden flood which struck a scenic mountain area near the Three Gorges Dam on the middle reaches of the Yangtze River on Saturday has left three tourists dead and two missing, according to Xinhua.

The three bodies were recovered yesterday afternoon, according to local sources.

The sources said that a group of 10 tourists were travelling in a bus operated by a local travel service in Yichang, the nearest city to the Three Gorges Dam, to tour the Sixi scenic area in Zigui County, Central China's Hubei Province, when they were in the path of the flood at 5:30 pm on Saturday at the Sandiaoshui Waterfall.

Meanwhile, flooding along the Yellow River has been continuing owing to continuous and excessive rainfall since late August.

A new wave of flooding on the Weihe River, a major branch of the Yellow River, is likely to pass through Huaxian County in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province today, Xinhua reported.

The Weihe River has in the past week experienced the largest flooding on record for the past 20 years.

Meanwhile, the Xiaolangdi Reservoir, a major water conservation and irrigation facility on the Yellow River located in Central China's Henan Province, started to discharge flood waters at 9 am on Saturday.

The reservoir stored an additional 2.11 billion cubic metres of water in a matter of 10 days from August 25 to September 5.

 

 

| Home | China Travel | China Cities | China Hotels |
China Info Travel copyright © 2001 - 2005 Web Tours International - contact info