15 dead after heavy rain, floods in China coal region
BEIJING: At least 15 people have died during unseasonably
heavy rain and flooding in north China's Shanxi province earlier this month,
local officials said Tuesday (Oct 12), after the normally dry region received
three months' rain in one week.
The flooding hit the coal-rich landlocked region during a
nationwide energy crunch, and after record floods killed more than 300 people
in central Henan province in July.
At least 60 coal mines in the province - one of China's top
coal-producing regions - had temporarily closed due to the floods, but now all
but four have returned to normal operation, local emergency management official
Wang Qirui said at a press conference.
Wang said around 19,000 buildings were destroyed by the
extreme weather, with 18,000 others "seriously damaged".
"Fifteen people died due to the disaster, and three
people remain missing," he added.
At least 1.75 million residents across the province have
been affected by the floods, with 120,000 safely evacuated, according to Wang.
Photos published Tuesday by local state newspaper Shanxi
Evening News showed traffic police carrying schoolchildren on their backs while
wading through waist-deep water after multiple vehicles got trapped.
Shanxi received more than three times the average monthly
rainfall for October in just five days last week, with the provincial
government saying precipitation had broken records in multiple localities.
Several regions across China have been hit by unprecedented
flooding this year.
Thousands were evacuated in the Hubei and Sichuan provinces
this summer because of torrential rain.
And more than 300 people were killed in central China's
Henan province last month after record downpours - a year's worth of rain in
three days.
Experts say freak weather events such as heavy floods and
punishing droughts are becoming increasingly common because of climate change
Source Channelnewsasia
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