Torrential rain over the past week has sent relief efforts and
anti-flood prevention into overdrive in China's central and
southern regions.
Seven people died and 25 are missing after five consecutive days of
heavy rain which swamped Guangdong Province.
Conditions are extremely severe in Guangzhou, Shaoguan and Zengchu
which are all threatened by floods.
Civic leaders in Guangdong sent special rescue groups to flood-hit
regions over the weekend, and flood control departments at all
levels are closely monitoring local conditions.
Residents in Zhengzhou, capital of Central China's Henan Province,
found themselves virtually cut off after a severe hailstorm hit the
city on Friday evening.
Scores of people were struck by the egg-shaped hailstones.
Telecommunications, electricity and water supplies were cut
temporarily, and traffic snarled.
Service hotlines for power, telecommunications and weather received
thousands of calls in the wake of the disaster. The mayor's hotline
was jammed with complaints.
Heavy winds and rainfall caused trees to fall down, dirt to pile up
along streets and segments of outdoor advertisement billboards to
become scattered across the city.
Witnesses said many cars parked under trees in central areas were
smashed to pieces when the trees were uprooted.
In
Weisi Street in the centre of the city, 11 huge billboards were
smashed, leaving lamps exposed and shards of glass across nearby
streets.
The skylights of many shopping centres in the street were also
badly damaged by the hailstone.
The city electricity supply department said the bad weather caused
a power cut in at least four major regions on Friday evening.
Railways, airports and public communications temporarily stopped
with more than 300 passengers stranded in Zhengzhou Airport.
Yao Daixian, vice-mayor of Zhengzhou, said on Saturday that at
least 10 people were killed by the hailstorm. He admitted the city
government had not expected damage to be so severe.
The city government has issued an urgent notice to the public,
calling for better precautions against bad weather in summer.
Officials with the Henan Meteorological Station pointed to a lack
of an effective warning system.
"We released an urgent warning about the hailstorm an hour before
it arrived, but we do not have an efficient way of informing
ordinary people fully," said Gu Wanglong, director of the
station.
He
called on the local government to build an emergency weather
warning system to reduce damage in future floods and other
disasters.
Gu
said they could not rule out further heavy hailstorms in Zhengzhou,
or in Henan in future, but he added large hailstones were extremely
rare in the province.
(China Daily July 22, 2002)
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