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WSWS : News
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: China
More devastating floods hit China
By Dragan Stankovic
3 August 2007
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Parts of China, especially along the eastern Huai River, have
had some of the heaviest rainfalls in 50 years. Continuous rain
since mid-June has resulted in widespread flooding, affecting
over 119 million people. Anhui, Sichuan and Hubei are the worst-hit
provinces.
At least 3.6 million people have been evacuated, over one million
houses have been damaged and another 452,000 destroyed. It is
estimated that at least 7.87 million hectares of farmland have
been ruined. Economic losses are estimated at $US6.9 billion,
but are expected to rise.
More than 650 people have been killed so far this flood season.
Last weekend alone, storms killed 17 in four provinces. Last Wednesday,
a three-hour rainstorm in Jinan, the capital of Shangdon province,
killed at least 34 people. Many died from electric shocks or drowned
in cars that were swept away. Meanwhile, in Henan province, 69
coal miners were trapped underground when rainwater flooded a
pit.
Even in the normally arid northwestern province of Xinjiang,
at least 32 people died in a flood caused by heavy rains last
week. The official Xinhua news agency reported that 48 Xinjiang
herdsmen and 13,000 goats were stranded for two days on a mountain
after a landslide cut paths. Last Wednesday, 33 villages in Yinshang
county of Anhui province were hit by a tornado that uprooted 100,000
trees, large areas of crops and houses. It caused economic losses
of $2.9 million.
In eastern China, the authorities projected that the Huai Riverthe
countrys third longest riveris retreating after staying
at dangerously high levels since early July. Some 268,000 people
in Anhui, Hunan and Jingshu, including 8,000 troops, were mobilised
to safeguard dykes that still face the danger of collapse. Hundreds
of thousands of displaced rural residents, whose homes were deliberately
flooded in order to protect urban centres, still cannot return
home.
Water Resources Minister Chen Lei warned that continued rain
in catchment areas could cause further flooding. He noted that
some 40 percent of the countrys 80,000 reservoirs are in
danger of bursting their banks. Last week Wuhan, the provincial
capital of Hubei and a city of 9 million, issued a warning over
the dangerously high water levels of the Hanjiang River, a tributary
of the Yangtze. In Hubei, heavy rains affected 1.39 million people
in 13 counties last weekend, with 100,700 hectares of crops damaged.
In southwestern Guizhou province, the water levels in many
smaller rivers exceeded the danger limit after last weeks
rain. Last Wednesday, one person was killed in a landslide in
the province. More than 3,000 people were evacuated in Pingtang
county after rising waters stranded 10,000 people. Downpours since
late June have caused serious landslides and flooding in the southwestern
province of Sichuan, killing at least 42 people.
In Anhui Province, one of Chinas poorest, more than 20
million people had been affected by floods by mid-July, leaving
at least 30 dead and causing the evacuation of over half a million.
The province has been among the worst-hit by this seasons
floods, with estimated damage of at least $1.6 billion.
In the first two weeks of July, six flood reserve areas had
been deliberately submerged. Emergency workers breached dykes
in a bid to ease pressure on the Huai River. Villagers living
inside the walls of the Shiyaowan dyke were evacuated, with officials
using sirens and troops to round up about 10,000 residents to
take them to higher ground.
Many have lost almost everything. One local farmer, Chen Guoqin,
told China Daily on July 18 that her family had almost
no crop this year. The flour, harvested before the flood
and left from last year, can barely feed us till the end of the
year. The chance of replanting is pretty dim and too late. I am
wondering if my husband and I should join my children and make
a living in relatively developed eastern cities.
Li Ling, a 32-year-old mother of three, was relocated along
with tens of thousands of other families from the Mengwa buffer
zone a week earlier. After losing her crop, she said her family
had to make do with the grain left over from last year. I
havent bought any meat for two months, Li said, adding
that she was still waiting for compensation for her losses due
to the release of water by a hydrological station.
Rising waters in and around Dongting Lake since late June have
resulted in a plague of rats, estimated to number two billion.
The area flooded after the Three Gorges Dam was opened to relieve
pressure from the heavy rains. The water flooded the rat burrows
triggering a mass migration.
The rat plague has destroyed rice, corn, cotton and other crops.
Villagers atttempted to halt the influx by clubbing rats, setting
traps, digging ditches and laying poison. Aside from the loss
of crops, there are concerns about disease. Tonnes of dead rats
have been found in ditches and along the lakes banks. In
Hunan province, officials are raising $790,000 to build a 40 km,
one-metre-high fence to prevent rat invasions.
Although the Chinese government has provided some immediate
relief for victims, the recurrence of flood disasters virtually
every year is the product of a lack of planning, infrastructure
and funds to maintain and extend flood control mechanisms. The
governments focus has been on the economically developed
eastern coastal provinces. The interior rural provinces are regarded
simply as sources of cheap labour, and, during the flood seasons,
a convenient buffer to protect the important major centres.
At the same time, scientists are warning that this years
heavy rain and floods are abnormal and may have been caused by
changing weather patterns resulting from global warming. While
parts of the country have been inundated, a heat wave has hit
seven southern and southwestern Chinese provinces in recent weeks,
affecting 200 million people. In Jiangxi, Hunan and Fujian, one
million residents face shortages of drinking water because of
a severe drought.
See Also:
Devastating floods hit six
Chinese provinces
[19 June 2007]
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