
Beijing Evacuated Thousands Before Floods, but Not the Most Vulnerable.
Though it is near the convergence of three rivers, the closest is about a quarter of a mile away and feeds into a massive reservoir downstream.
So it came as a shock when that river, the Qingshui, suddenly burst through its flood banks in the early hours of July 28, sending torrents of water through the streets. Residents ran outside, yelling at their neighbors to wake up, and scrambled onto rooftops.
One of the first buildings to be inundated was the Taishitun Elderly Care Center. Inside, 55 of the 69 residents were either fully or partially incapacitated and dependent on the eight workers there that day to move. The one-story nursing home was soon submerged in six feet of water.
Before
Taishitun Elderly
Care Center
Qingshui River
Putaoyuan
After
Flooded
areas
Taishitun Elderly
Care Center
Qingshui River
Many of the areas
near here flooded
Source: Planet Labs
By Leanne Abraham
Firefighters arrived around 7 a.m. but were overpowered by currents that, at their peak, were flowing faster than the Niagara Falls. They began rescue operations only three hours later. Footage on Chinese state media showed rescue workers with ropes, swimming into the nursing home to reach people clinging to windowsills. But many of the residents had already perished. In total, 31 people died — a toll that shocked the capital and beyond.
'To be honest, no one expected this. And it's not just common people. Our village has people over the age of 70, even over 80, and they have never seen such bad weather since they were children,' said Cai Xiaokui, 49, who is from the same area, Putaoyuan village, as the nursing home.
As the country braces for more extreme and unpredictable weather caused by climate change, the disaster in the Miyun District of Beijing also has exposed what local officials admitted were 'flaws' in emergency planning. City officials issued a rare apology and this week called for all flood prevention and disaster relief measures to be 'unremittingly implemented.'
As global temperatures rise, shifting ocean currents are causing more rainfall in China's typically arid north. A report released in June by China's Ecology and Environment Ministry said precipitation in northern China last year was 83 percent higher than the average between 1991 and 2020.
The recent floods in Beijing and neighboring Hebei Province — which killed at least 60 people and displaced more than 80,000 people — mark the fifth time the region has been hit by extreme rains in the last 15 years.
Across China, the number of flash floods has at least doubled compared with a stretch before the year 2000, according to a recent analysis by Guangtao Fu, a professor at the University of Exeter focusing on water systems.
Mass floods in the capital in 2012, 2016 and 2023 were concentrated in the south. But this year, the rains struck to the north, where residents and officials were less prepared.
Before the floods hit, it had rained for five days straight, with some areas of Miyun pounded by nearly a year's worth of precipitation. The heavy downpour in Miyun, as well as upstream in the Ganyu Valley, caused the Qingshui River to surge to record levels. By the morning of July 28, the river's rate of flow was 1,500 times its normal level.
That torrent surged into Taishitun, taking out trees and cars, and sped downstream to the Miyun Reservoir, which had already risen to its highest level since it was built in the 1960s. The authorities had issued a red alert, the highest level, 48 hours earlier — but no particular instructions to evacuate.
After the deaths at the nursing home, Beijing officials held a news conference where they issued the apology and acknowledged that more than 16,000 people in Miyun had been evacuated, with officials going door to door in some areas — but not to the nursing home.
'For a long time, the town center where the nursing home is was safe' said Yu Weiguo, secretary of the Miyun District Committee. 'That shows flaws in our contingency plan and that our understanding of extreme weather is not enough,' Mr. Yu said before he and other officials bowed their heads in a moment of silence.
China's Meteorological Administration said two days after the deaths that accurate forecasting of such extreme weather is still a 'global problem' and that the agency would work on 'strengthening' its early warning capabilities.
In a country where many families wrestle with how to care for their aging relatives, the deaths in Miyun have touched a nerve. On social media, commentators posted videos calling for an overhaul of nursing home safety or for citizens to take better care of their parents.
'The Miyun incident shows the failure of disaster response that relies on past experience,' Lu Jingsheng, a professor at the School of Business at Renmin University of China wrote in an article published on WeChat. 'A civilized society must uphold its responsibility to vulnerable groups.'
After the previous floods, officials in Beijing updated urban drainage and added pumping systems to low-lying areas to funnel water away, according to Ma Jun, an environmentalist and the founder of the Beijing-based Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs.
'This time there's still some very hard lessons,' Mr. Ma said. 'Obviously, the monitoring still has gaps. The early warning forecast is still not as accurate as we would like to see.'
The Qingshui, like many rivers in northern China, has been dredged and modified for better flood control. But experts say adding flood walls or channeling rivers between concrete embankments — China's traditional method of flood prevention — has made such disasters worse because the surrounding area is less able to absorb the water.
'We need to make the ground permeable. We need to remove all the concrete,' said Kongjian Yu, a landscape architect and professor at Peking University. 'We need to change, but engineers keep building higher and higher flood walls.'
Floods in the northwestern province of Gansu have killed 15 people, officials said on Saturday, prompting China's leader, Xi Jinping, to order all-out efforts to try to rescue more than 30 people still missing.
After the floods receded in Putaoyuan, residents complained of the stench of dead fish and dead animals. The insides of people's homes were covered in mud. Still some praised the rescue efforts by their neighbors.
A group of men in the village had used front-end loaders to ferry residents from their rooftops to safety or to guide emergency workers on inflatable boats. Mr. Cai, who runs a guesthouse in the village, offered rescue workers free accommodation. He said that in the aftermath of the floods, local restaurants have not been charging residents for meals.
'That feeling of solidarity is really strong,' he said. 'You know, normally neighbors might have little disagreements, but when something this big happens, people really aren't selfish at all.'
Xinyun Wu contributed reporting from Taipei.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
At least 33 feared dead after flash flood devastates remote Himalayan village
At least 33 people were feared dead after a flash flood triggered by sudden heavy rain devastated a remote village in the restive Himalayan region of Kashmir. Nearly 200 people were also missing after the disaster struck Chasoti village, a pitstop on a popular Hindu pilgrimage route in Kishtwar district, Reuters quoted government officials as saying. Chishoti is where pilgrims leave their vehicles and set out on foot to the Machail Mata temple, located at an elevation of 2,800m. 'The news is grim and accurate, verified information from the area hit by the cloudburst is slow in arriving,' Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah said. Federal deputy minister for science and technology, Jitendra Singh, said the flood was triggered by a cloudburst and "could result in substantial casualties". He said rescue teams were finding it hard to reach the village due to bad weather. The flood washed away a road and the weather wasn't helicopter-worthy, he said. Susheel Kumar Sharma, a government official, said villagers and local public workers recovered bodies of seven people from a stream and rescued nearly 60 people. Mr Sharma said many people were still missing as the flood swept away dozens of vehicles and motorbikes. TV footage showed pilgrims crying in fear as floodwaters inundated the village. Villagers said the flood also washed away makeshift shops and community kitchens set up for the pilgrims. Lieutenant governor Manoj Sinha, the top administrator of Kashmir appointed by New Delhi, offered condolences for the loss of life in the disaster and said he had directed personnel from India's military, paramilitary, police and disaster management agencies to strengthen rescue and relief operations. Narendra Modi said "the situation is being monitored closely". "Rescue and relief operations are underway. Every possible assistance will be provided to those in need," the prime minister said on X. A cloudburst, according to the Indian Meteorological Department, is an intense downpour of over 100mm of rain in just an hour that can trigger floods and landslides, especially in mountainous areas. Cloudbursts are increasingly common in India's Himalayan regions, which are prone to flash floods and landslides.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Flooding In Tennessee Damages Countless Cars
Read the full story on The Auto Wire Flooding in Chattanooga, Tennessee made a mess of roads, flooding countless cars and causing widespread destruction. Even worse, at the time this article was written, the death toll was at four individuals, a number which likely will more rain forecasted for the area by the National Weather Service, the flooding is expected to worsen before it gets better. That has officials pleading with people to stay home instead of trying to traverse flooded roads. Numerous streets and neighborhoods are flooded, with cars abandoned as drivers who thought they could make it were forced to leave their rides. Even more shocking, sections of Interstate 24 by the Georgia border have become impassible, thanks to high waters and stalled out cars. Footage taken by a bystander and shared on social media site X shows a man breaking the back window on an SUV to rescue a woman trapped inside. The water comes up to the man's neck as the vehicle floats helplessly in the floodwaters. One of the deceased was found in floodwaters as rescuers searched for someone else who was swept away, reports Chattanooga Times Free Press. The other three deaths were from a family who were in their car when a tree fell on it. The best way to not get into a bad situation when a road is flooded is to not drive down it. Many times, drivers believe the water they're headed towards is shallower than it really is, only realizing once they're literally in too deep that they're in trouble. Everyone should have a glass break in their car, just in case they end up in a situation where they need to escape through a window quickly. Most vehicles will float for a few minutes before they start to sink, and that's when you want to get out. Image via X Join our Newsletter, subscribe to our YouTube page, and follow us on Facebook.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Thunderstorm warnings issued for parts of the country amid ongoing heatwave
Weather warnings have been issued for thunderstorms across parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland as the fourth heatwave of the summer continues. The Met Office has issued a yellow thunderstorm warning for large part of north-eastern Scotland, where it said up to 70mm of rain could fall in two hours. A yellow thunderstorm warning has also been issued for the eastern part of Northern Ireland, which could see up to 50mm of rain. Flood alerts have also been issued for Scotland. In both areas the Met Office has warned of difficult driving conditions and possible disruption to public transport and power supplies, and of a risk of flooding to homes and businesses. The forecaster also said fast-flowing or deep floodwater could pose a danger to life. Both yellow thunderstorm warnings are in place until 10pm on Thursday. It comes as heat health alerts were extended into next week for much of England. The UK Health Security Agency said yellow warnings will now be in place for Yorkshire and Humber, the East and West Midlands, London and the South East, South West and east of England until 6pm on August 18. The Scottish Environment Protection Agency said heavy thundery showers or rain may affect the region on Thursday, with a risk of significant localised flooding from surface water and smaller rivers. Heavy rain and thunder hit London and Kent on Wednesday. But officials have said England is suffering from 'nationally significant' water shortfalls. The national drought group, which includes the Met Office, regulators, government, water companies and other organisations, has met as five areas of the country remain in drought, with six more in prolonged dry weather status. On Thursday there will be residual showers and isolated thunderstorms across the South East, gradually clearing, and lightning, hail and heavy rain drifting northwards from Scotland into the Northern Isles. Paul Gundersen, chief meteorologist at the Met Office, said: 'Some areas will continue to experience their fourth heatwave of the summer so far, with Thursday remaining warm or very warm for many, though cooler near coasts. 'Temperatures could still reach 30C in eastern England, though many areas will be a few degrees cooler than earlier in the week.' Northern England will have patchy rain and cloud on Friday while southern England will enjoy sunshine and temperatures of up to 31C. The weekend should be dry and sunny for most parts of the UK, climbing to 30C on Saturday and 29C on Sunday in south-west England.