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China floods kill 171, more rain expected

By The Associated Press
Posted 4:37AM on Tuesday 17th June 2008 ( 16 years ago )
GUANGZHOU, China - Soldiers scrambled to shore up soggy levies with sandbags Tuesday in southern China as forecasters warned that more heavy rain in the central region could trigger new flooding on the country's second-longest river. The death toll rose to 171, state-run media said.

The high waters swamped crop land in the south, forcing farmers to wade into their fields and harvest unripe cucumbers, bitter melons and other vegetables before they spoiled in the water. The natural disaster was driving up food prices that were already soaring before the heavy rains began last month.

The death toll from this year's flooding in 20 provinces and the western Xinjiang region has already reached 171, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. At least 1.27 million people have been relocated and crop damage was reported on 2.12 million acres, Xinhua said.

The hardest-hit provinces included Guangxi, Jiangxi, Hunnan, Hubei, Guangdong, Guizhou, Yunnan, Zhejiang and Anhui.

In Guangdong, officials reinforced embankments in nine cities, including the provincial capital, Guangzhou, Xinhua said. Local television showed soldiers in green camouflage uniforms lugging large sandbags on their backs as they hurried to build up levies in Guangdong, one of the nation's biggest manufacturing bases.

Shopowners in the south-central Guangdong city of Huizhou tried to salvage soaked goods from the floors of their stores. Local television showed employees of a bank using brooms to push out a thick layer of watery brown muck from their establishment.

State broadcaster CCTV reported about 30,000 people were evacuated in Zhaoqing, a city along the Xijiang River in western Guangdong.

Meanwhile, forecasters were worried about rising waters on central China's Yellow River, the nation's second-longest after the Yangtze River. The Meteorological Administration warned that flood prevention efforts were entering a "crucial phase" because heavy rain over the next few days would raise the threat of flooding on the Yellow River, the state-run China Daily reported.

Provinces on the lower and middle parts of the river, including Shanxi, Shaanxi, Henan and Shandong were in the most danger, the report said.


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