BBC: Millions menaced by China floods
Tuesday, 20 August, 2002
More than 10 million people are under threat from potentially devastating
floods, as water levels in central China's massive Dongting Lake continue to
rise.
With more torrential rain forecast in the coming days, and swollen rivers
already emptying into the lake, officials fear it could burst its banks,
flooding millions of homes and 667,000 hectares (1.6 million acres) of fertile
farmland.
When the Yangtze and the Dongting last broke their banks in 1998, more than
4,000 people were killed. There are fears even more people could perish this
year.
Landslides and flash floods caused by torrential rain have already killed
more than 100 people in southern China in the past two weeks alone, bringing
this year's death toll close to 1,000.
Tropical storm
At 0800 (0000 GMT) on Tuesday, the water in Dongting Lake was almost 1.5
metres (five feet) above the 32 metre (106 foot) flood warning marks, said an
official from the anti-flood bureau of nearby Changde city.
Experts warn the water level is likely to rise still further, and local
authorities have mobilised thousands of people to man the lake's embankments
around the clock.
To add to concerns, meteorologists have warned that the tropical storm
Vongfong could dump yet more torrential rain over the province of Hunan as it
moves across the country.
Vongfong - named after an insect that inflicts a painful sting - hit the
southern province of Guangdong on Monday evening and was gradually moving
north-east, the Central Meteorological Bureau in Beijing said.
As it moves across the country it is expected to bring heavy rain to
Guangdong and Guangxi provinces as well as Hunan, forecasters said.
The storm has already brought torrential rain to southern China during Monday
and Tuesday, stranding air and rail passengers but causing no reported
casualties, reports said.
The southern island province of Hainan was battered through Monday, with 113
flights delayed and more than 3,000 passengers stranded, the official China New
Service said.
The flood season started early this year, with flash floods and landslides
killing hundreds in June. The situation then abated, but the floods have
worsened again over the past fortnight.
Wider problem
Many other Asian countries have also been affected by heavy flooding.
At least 900 people have died since the middle of July in eastern India,
Nepal and Bangladesh after heavy monsoon rains triggered widespread flooding,
landslides and disease.
The flood control minister of India's Assam state, Nurjamal Sarkar, said
thousands of homes had been destroyed by the flood waters.
In Cambodia, water levels on the Mekong river rose to above emergency levels
in two central towns following heavy rain in the north-east of the country. Laos
was also hit by floods.
Disaster teams were given a brief respite in the north of Vietnam when the
Vongfong storm skirted the region, giving them time to reach some of the areas
affected by recent flooding.
More than 25 people died in flash floods in the region bordering China, in
four days of flooding that swept away houses, bridges and roads and triggered
landslides, in what is considered Vietnam's worst flooding in six years.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2194468.stm

Officials fear the worst floods in years
Dongting, in the southern province of Hunan, acts as a giant overflow for the
flood-prone Yangtze River.
Landslides have claimed lives in Yunnan
Many Indians have been displaced by floods
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