
Four killed, eight missing as heavy rain soaks northern China
Authorities relocated more than 4,400 people as colossal rain continued to pound the suburban area of Miyun in Beijing causing flash floods and landslides, impacting many villages, state broadcaster CCTV reported.
Images circulated on China's WeChat app showed areas of Miyun where cars and trucks were floating on a flooded road where water levels had risen so high that it had submerged part of a residential building.
Electricity cuts are also affecting more than 10,000 people, in the area, CCTV said.
Northern China has seen record precipitation in recent years, exposing densely populated cities, including Beijing, to flood risks. Some scientists link the increased rainfall in China's usually arid north to global warming.
China's Central Meteorological Observatory said that heavy rainfall would continue to drench northern China over the next three days. Beijing issued its highest level flood alert on Monday, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The storms are part of the broader pattern of extreme weather across China due to the East Asian monsoon, which has caused disruptions in the world's second-largest economy.
Xiwanzi Village in Shicheng Town, near Miyun Reservoir, was severely affected, CCTV said on Monday with an additional 100 villagers transferred to a primary school for shelter.
It comes after the maximum flood peak flow into the Miyun reservoir reached a record high of 6550 cubic meters per second, Beijing authorities said on Sunday.
In neighbouring Shanxi province, videos from state media showed roads inundated by strong gushing currents and submerged vegetation including crops and trees.
Shaanxi province, home to China's historic city of Xian, also issued flash flood disaster risk warnings on Monday.
In Beijing's Pinggu District, two high-risk road sections have been sealed, authorities said.
Authorities are carrying out search and rescue work across cities including Datong, where a driver in a Ford car has lost contact while driving in the floods, the People's Daily reported.
China's Water Resources Ministry has issued targeted flood warnings to 11 provinces and regions, including Beijing and neighbouring Hebei, for floods from small and mid-sized rivers and mountain torrents.
Two were dead and two missing in Hebei province, CCTV said on Sunday morning. Overnight rain dumped a record 145mm per hour on Fuping in the industrial city of Baoding.
China's National Development and Reform Commission said on Monday that it was urgently arranging 50 million yuan (US$6.98 million) to support Hebei.
The funds would be used to repair damaged roads and bridges, water conservancy embankments, schools and hospitals in the disaster area. The NDRC said it was "promoting the restoration of normal life and production as soon as possible".
Chinese authorities closely monitor extreme rainfall and severe flooding as they challenge the country's ageing flood defences, threaten to displace millions and wreak havoc on China's US$2.8 trillion agricultural sector.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
2 days ago
- CNA
Chongqing residents seek shelter as heatwave hits China's southwest
CHONGQING, China: Temperatures topping 40 degrees Celsius have broiled Chongqing, a metropolis in China's southwest known for its fiery hotpot restaurants and cyberpunk cityscape, pushing some locals to cope with the increasingly hot weather in innovative ways. "It's getting hotter and hotter," said Liu Fengying, 60, a local resident. As afternoon temperatures soared on Thursday (Jul 31), Liu avoided the heat by playing card games and sharing snacks with friends among around 100 retirees sheltering in the air-conditioned chill of a subway entrance. "Aside from coming here, there's really no other way to avoid the heat. Last night, even with the AC set to 17 degrees Celsius, it was still hot and wouldn't cool down." Record heat across China has strained its power grid as demand surges to new all-time highs, now in excess of 1.5 billion kilowatts, with records broken four times just in July. After daily peaks exceeding 40 degrees Celsius for a week, Chongqing elevated its heat-wave warning to the highest level - a red alert - on Thursday, with 21 out of its 38 districts forecast to hit up to 43 degrees Celsius. A peak of 44 degrees Celsius is projected for Sunday. Historically, daily peaks in the city of nearly 32 million people have rarely exceeded 39 degrees Celsius in July, which is already very hot by global standards. Since the start of May, the number of days the city recorded temperatures exceeding 35 degrees Celsius this year was double the historic average. But some Chongqingers remain unfazed - for now. Xie, 79, one of dozens of swimmers who gathered at a tributary of the Yangtze as the sun started to set on Thursday, cools down with regular swims in China's longest river. "Chongqing has always been a furnace city, but we have the river to cool down," he said before diving off a 2m tall riverbank in his underwear. On the same night, Qiu Xianhui, 36, came with friends to eat hotpot, Chongqing's famously spicy broth, at a restaurant in one of the city's old bomb shelters, where the air cools naturally.


CNA
2 days ago
- CNA
Beijing officials admit 'gaps' in readiness after rain kill dozens
Out of those deaths, 31 took place at an "elderly care centre" in the town of Taishitun in the northeast of the city, Xia said. Among those still missing are local officials working on search and rescue, he added. "On behalf of the municipal party committee and the city government, I would like to express deep mourning for those who have regrettably lost their lives, and profound condolences to their relatives," he said. Xia vowed to "learn profound lessons" from the disaster. "Our ability to forecast and warn of extreme weather is insufficient, and disaster prevention and mitigation plans have not been fully developed. There are still shortcomings in the construction of infrastructure in mountainous areas," he said. Yu Weiguo, ruling Communist Party boss in the hard-hit Miyun district, also admitted there had been "gaps" in readiness. "Our knowledge of extreme weather was lacking. This tragic lesson has warned us that putting the people first, putting human life first, is more than a slogan," he said. Natural disasters are common across China, particularly in the summer when some regions experience heavy rain while others bake in searing heat. China is the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases that drive climate change and contribute to making extreme weather more frequent and intense.


CNA
3 days ago
- CNA
'All gone': Beijing villagers left with nothing after deadly floods
HUAIROU, China: Villager Hu Yuefang returned to her home on the rural outskirts of Beijing to pick up medicine for her elderly and disabled father, only to find it had been washed away by some of the worst flooding to hit the Chinese capital in years. Swathes of northern China have endured deadly rains and floods this week that killed at least 48 people and forced the evacuation of tens of thousands. As clean-up efforts began on Wednesday (Jul 30), AFP journalists visited the northern Beijing district of Huairou - one of the worst-hit areas less than 100 kilometres from the bustling city centre. In Anzhouba village, muddy waters had receded, exposing scraps of metal and broken branches. Local Hu recounted a frantic call to her stepdaughter, 23, who was home with her parents when the waters struck on Saturday night. "But before I could finish my words, the call dropped," she told AFP. She later found out that rushing water from the river around 10 metres away had flooded the house and blocked the front door. Her daughter was forced to kick out the window and evacuate her grandparents to the neighbour's balcony, dragging her disabled grandfather as his wife pushed from below. "I've never seen this before, in all my 40 years of life. Neither have those who've lived 80 or 90 years," she said. "I returned today to retrieve his medicine, but the water swept it all away." IT'S ALL GONE Wearing slippers, she marched over downed power lines and debris from broken fences and destroyed cars as she surveyed the damage to the village where she has lived her entire life. Mud with streaks of silt caked her walls - evidence that the flood waters had reached at least over a metre high. "I've already lived here for many years - my parents have lived here for almost 70 years, I've lived here for 40 - I can't bear to leave." A small blue sofa near the front door had washed out into the alley. The family of six subsists on 2,000 (US$278) to 3,000 yuan a month, Hu, a stay-at-home carer whose husband works as a labourer, said. They grow their vegetables - from green beans, cucumbers, potatoes - but the field has been destroyed. "It's gone. All gone, flushed away," she said. "UNLIVABLE" In Liulimiao town, which covers Anzhouba village, AFP journalists saw evacuations taking place throughout Wednesday, with elderly villagers driven by bus from their mountainous homes. An older woman who declined to give her name said she was "not allowed" to return home but had gone back anyway to check in. When the floods hit, she said, "there was nobody paying attention to us", adding the water hit "suddenly" on Saturday. Another villager, surnamed Wang, gazed at the destruction of his home, which he built with government subsidies 15 years ago. He estimated his losses to be around 100,000 yuan (US$14,000). His wife and two daughters were home and unable to open the doors when the waters "suddenly rose". The waters reached 1.5 metres, leaving brown muddy residue on the wall and a mounted TV. Their car, which Wang bought so his daughter could practice driving, was washed uphill from outside their home. Five more minutes of flooding might have put his family's life in danger, he said. "It didn't give people a chance," Wang said. His home was now "unlivable", he explained tearfully.