
Heavy rains in northern China kill 4 as Beijing and neighboring areas issue flood warnings
The victims were caught in a landslide in a rural part of Luanping county in the province of Hebei, which borders the capital, Beijing, according to state broadcaster CCTV. Eight remain missing. A local resident told the state-backed Beijing News that communications were down and he couldn't reach his relatives.

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News24
24 minutes ago
- News24
Nigeria issues flood alert for over half of its 36 states
Nigerian weather forecasters on Wednesday warned that parts of 21 of the country's 36 states are likely to experience flooding in the coming days due to heavy rains, as Lagos officials warned residents in some areas to evacuate. The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) said 'conditions are highly conducive for intense and prolonged rainfall, which, when combined with already saturated soil profiles and elevated river levels, significantly increases the risk of flooding'. The weather agency flagged several 'high risk' states, including Niger State, where floods flattened a neighbourhood and killed at least 200 in May. Although not on the warning list, more than 10 hours of heavy rainfall on Monday flooded several areas in the commercial hub Lagos of around 20 million people, where officials warned residents in 'lowland' areas to evacuate. 'Based on the predictions from NiMet, we are going to have much more rain this year than we had last year,' Tokunbo Wahab, Lagos state commissioner for the environment, told local broadcaster Channels Television. 'For those who stay in the lowland of Lagos, they may have to move to the upland pending when rain recedes,' he said, listing some popular neighbourhoods such as Lekki and Ikorodu. Heavy rains sweep Nigeria between June and November, often triggering dangerous floods, where poor infrastructure and inadequate drainage often worsen the impact across Africa's most populous country. In 2022, more than 500 people died and 1.4 million were displaced in the country's worst floods in a decade, while last year, more than 300 people were killed and over a million displaced in at least 34 out of Nigeria's 36 states.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Rains and Broken Roads Complicate Flood Rescue in Indian Himalayas
Harsh rains, collapsed roads and uprooted electrical lines have complicated ongoing rescue efforts in the Indian Himalayas, officials said Wednesday, after flash floods killed at least four people and left dozens missing the day before. Confirming the precise death toll may take up to a week, officials said, warning that the number of casualties could rise substantially. On Wednesday, Pushkar Singh Dhami, the chief minister of the northern state of Uttarakhand, told an Indian news outlet that at least 190 people had been rescued from the wreckage, after a muddy torrent of water ripped into the village of Dharali the day before, bulldozing buildings and burying the area in mud. The town's central marketplace was destroyed, according to the district office managing the disaster relief, and roads were damaged and transportation was difficult. People in the area were evacuated to shelter sites, and many families were anxiously waiting to find out the fate of relatives caught in the natural disaster, the office added. Indian Army forces, equipped with tracking dogs, drones and earth-moving equipment, have supplemented the rescue effort. Images of the effort published by Reuters show teams using ziplines to rescue marooned victims and deploying heavy machinery to move large boulders and pieces of debris. The floods and landslide caused large boulders to block narrow mountain roads that lead into Dharali, and ripped mobile phone towers and electric lines from the ground, making it difficult to establish communication with the area. Those factors, along with strong, continued rains, have made it harder for rescue workers to quickly locate missing people, officials said. Uttarakhand is prone to floods and landslides. In 2013, the state suffered its deadliest floods, which left over 6,000 people dead. The monsoon rains this year have also created significant damage in the neighboring state of Himachal Pradesh. Nearly 200 people have been killed over the past six weeks in monsoon-related disasters, according to official data, and 300 others have been injured and three dozen missing.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Beijing lifts rain alert after tens of thousands evacuated
Beijing lifted a severe weather alert on Tuesday but warned residents to stay vigilant against natural disasters after authorities evacuated more than 82,000 people over fears of deadly floods in the Chinese capital. The municipal weather office imposed a red rainstorm warning -- the highest in a four-tier system -- on Monday, forecasting heavy downpours until Tuesday morning. The office lifted the alert Tuesday morning, saying in a social media statement the weather system had weakened as it drifted eastwards. But it continued to warn of isolated downpours across outlying parts of the city, adding that people "must not let up after strong rains have passed" as landslides or other disasters may follow. Authorities evacuated over 82,000 people at risk from heavy rainfall as of Monday evening, state news agency Xinhua said, citing the city's flood control headquarters. Officials warned of flooding risks in the northeastern suburb of Miyun -- the hardest hit by the recent deluge -- as well as southwestern Fangshan, western Mentougou and northern Huairou. In Mentougou, footage filmed Tuesday by the state-backed Beijing News showed several mostly elderly residents of one village resting on camp beds in a local education centre converted to house evacuees. More than 1,000 people were temporarily relocated to a military training school in Huairou, according to a social media account linked to the district government. In Miyun, where dozens died last week, most of the recent floodwater had receded on Tuesday -- leaving behind a trail of debris including tree branches and piles of bricks. AFP reporters saw dented cars, toppled tractors and household items like strollers and luggage strewn across the muddy ground. Twisted metal railings and slanted utility poles still lined the roadside as workers in neon yellow vests and wearing hard hats worked to clear the wreckage. Nearby, trees had been uprooted, lying in a river gushing with murky brown water. Workers operating excavators cleared boulders blocking a road, while across a river, several homes lay abandoned with collapsed roofs. Last week, floods in Beijing's northern suburbs killed at least 44 people and left nine missing, according to official figures. Residents of flood-hit areas told AFP journalists they had been surprised at the speed with which the rushing water had inundated homes and villages. The devastation prompted a rare admission from local officials that there had been "gaps" in disaster readiness. - Restoring order - At a meeting on Monday, the municipal government stressed the need to "restore the normal order of life and production in post-disaster areas as quickly as possible". China's public security ministry also warned people to be on guard against "rumours", including exaggerating the extent of natural disasters to create panic, state broadcaster CCTV said on Tuesday. China has been lashed by heavy rains in recent weeks, with heavy flooding in the north followed by intense precipitation along the southern coast. Parts of the southern city of Hong Kong were brought to a standstill on Tuesday by flooding caused by heavy rains, after the highest-tier rainstorm warning was issued for the fourth time in eight days. 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 the greenhouse gases that drive climate change and contribute to making extreme weather more frequent and intense. But it is also a global renewable energy powerhouse that aims to make its massive economy carbon-neutral by 2060. isk-sam/oho/djw