China has brought flood under control
21/9/2004 11:39
China has brought floods under control so far this year, said Zhang Zhitong,
an official with the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters, in
Beijing Monday. Water levels of certain reaches of the Yangtze River and the
Huaihe River, together with the Xijiang River, a branch of the Pearl River,
topped the warning line this summer. But other rivers and lakes in China stayed
safe and sound, said Zhang. The official said that this year's death toll
sharply decreased as against the same period in the 1990s. All levels of the
flood control and drought relief departments have formed complete emergency
plans, said Zhang. In west China, continuous rainfall triggered serious
flooding, mountain torrents, mudflows and landslides. As of Sept. 15, the
disasters had killed 1,029 people and caused a loss of 64.7 billion yuan (about
US$7.8 billion) while 7.59 million hectares of farmland were reported affected
by the floods, the official said. The central provinces of Hunan, Hubei and
Henan, western Sichuan and Yunnan provinces, southern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, and eastern Zhejiang Province suffered greater losses in this summer's
flood. The official added that China should further improve its capabilities
dealing with mountain torrents, mudflows and landslides, which brought about
three quarters of the death toll this summer.
Xinhua
|