
Over 80,000 people flee severe flooding in southwest China
Drones deliver supplies including rice to flood victims
SHANGHAI: Flooding in China's southwest has driven more than 80,000 people from their homes, state media said on Wednesday, as a collapsed bridge forced the dramatic rescue of a truck driver left dangling over the edge.
China is enduring a summer of extremes, with heat waves scorching wide swaths of the country while rainstorms pummel other regions. Climate change - which scientists say is exacerbated by greenhouse gas emissions - is making such weather more frequent and more intense.
Around 80,900 people had been evacuated by Tuesday afternoon in the southwestern province of Guizhou, state news agency Xinhua reported. 'It's very bad this time,' Xiong Xin, a member of a rescue team who was in Rongjiang county on Tuesday, told AFP, describing the flooding as a 'once-in-50-year event'.
Images shared with AFP by Xiong showed a row of shops on the first floor of a building submerged, with residents leaning out of second-floor windows. In Rongjiang a football field was 'submerged under three metres of water', Xinhua said. Rescuers pushed boats carrying residents through murky, knee-high water and children waited in a kindergarten as emergency personnel approached them, the footage showed.
One resident in an affected area told Xinhua 'the water rose very quickly'. 'I stayed on the third floor waiting for rescue. By the afternoon I had been transferred to safety.' Footage from state broadcaster CCTV showed severe flooding has inundated villages and collapsed a bridge in one mountainous area of the province. A team was also seen preparing a drone to deliver supplies including rice to flood victims. In a video circulated by local media, truck driver You Guochun recounted his harrowing rescue after he ended up perched over the edge of a broken bridge segment. 'A bridge collapsed entirely in front of me,' he said. 'I was terrified.'
Alerts
China's top economic planning body has allocated 100 million yuan ($13.95 million) for disaster relief in Guizhou, Xinhua said. Floods have also hit neighbouring Guangxi region, with state media publishing videos of rescuers there carrying residents to safety. Tens of thousands of people were evacuated last week in the central province of Hunan due to heavy rain.
And nearly 70,000 people in southern China were relocated days earlier after heavy flooding caused by Typhoon Wutip. Chinese authorities issued the year's first red alerts last week for mountain torrents in six regions - the most severe warning level in the country's four-tier system.
Some areas in the affected regions were 'extremely likely to be hit', Xinhua reported, with local governments urged to issue timely warnings to residents. Authorities in Beijing this week issued the second-highest heat warning for the capital on one of its hottest days of the year so far. Last year was China's hottest on record. China is the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter but is also a renewable energy powerhouse, seeking to cut carbon dioxide emissions to net zero by 2060. — Reuters

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
7 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Over 80,000 people flee severe flooding in southwest China
Drones deliver supplies including rice to flood victims SHANGHAI: Flooding in China's southwest has driven more than 80,000 people from their homes, state media said on Wednesday, as a collapsed bridge forced the dramatic rescue of a truck driver left dangling over the edge. China is enduring a summer of extremes, with heat waves scorching wide swaths of the country while rainstorms pummel other regions. Climate change - which scientists say is exacerbated by greenhouse gas emissions - is making such weather more frequent and more intense. Around 80,900 people had been evacuated by Tuesday afternoon in the southwestern province of Guizhou, state news agency Xinhua reported. 'It's very bad this time,' Xiong Xin, a member of a rescue team who was in Rongjiang county on Tuesday, told AFP, describing the flooding as a 'once-in-50-year event'. Images shared with AFP by Xiong showed a row of shops on the first floor of a building submerged, with residents leaning out of second-floor windows. In Rongjiang a football field was 'submerged under three metres of water', Xinhua said. Rescuers pushed boats carrying residents through murky, knee-high water and children waited in a kindergarten as emergency personnel approached them, the footage showed. One resident in an affected area told Xinhua 'the water rose very quickly'. 'I stayed on the third floor waiting for rescue. By the afternoon I had been transferred to safety.' Footage from state broadcaster CCTV showed severe flooding has inundated villages and collapsed a bridge in one mountainous area of the province. A team was also seen preparing a drone to deliver supplies including rice to flood victims. In a video circulated by local media, truck driver You Guochun recounted his harrowing rescue after he ended up perched over the edge of a broken bridge segment. 'A bridge collapsed entirely in front of me,' he said. 'I was terrified.' Alerts China's top economic planning body has allocated 100 million yuan ($13.95 million) for disaster relief in Guizhou, Xinhua said. Floods have also hit neighbouring Guangxi region, with state media publishing videos of rescuers there carrying residents to safety. Tens of thousands of people were evacuated last week in the central province of Hunan due to heavy rain. And nearly 70,000 people in southern China were relocated days earlier after heavy flooding caused by Typhoon Wutip. Chinese authorities issued the year's first red alerts last week for mountain torrents in six regions - the most severe warning level in the country's four-tier system. Some areas in the affected regions were 'extremely likely to be hit', Xinhua reported, with local governments urged to issue timely warnings to residents. Authorities in Beijing this week issued the second-highest heat warning for the capital on one of its hottest days of the year so far. Last year was China's hottest on record. China is the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter but is also a renewable energy powerhouse, seeking to cut carbon dioxide emissions to net zero by 2060. — Reuters

Kuwait Times
15 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Millions in US sweat out first extreme heat wave of year
US' first significant scorching heat triggers health warnings NEW YORK: A potentially life-threatening heat wave enveloped the eastern third of the United States on Monday impacting nearly 160 million people, with temperatures this week expected to reach 102 degrees Fahrenheit (39 degrees Celsius) in the New York metropolitan area. The country's first significant scorching heat of the year triggered health warnings as it arrived over the weekend. Dangerously high temperatures are forecast through Wednesday in Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City and Boston. 'This extreme heat will not just be uncomfortable and oppressive for New Yorkers,' warned Mayor Eric Adams, adding that each year heat claims the lives of 500 people in this city of eight million. 'It's going to be brutal and dangerous if you do not treat it with the understanding that we want you to,' he added. As sweltering heat baked the city, authorities urged seniors, people with health problems and those without air conditioning to stay hydrated and seek help at designated cooling centers such as libraries and recreation facilities. Heat records tumbled across parts of the US Northeast. In Central Park, known as the lungs of Manhattan, Monday's temperature of 96F (36C) tied a record that has stood since 1888, according to the National Weather Service. 'Extreme Heat Warnings and Heat Advisories across much of the eastern third of the country (are) affecting nearly 160 million people' across at least 29 states, the NWS reported. 'This level of HeatRisk is known for being rare and/or long duration with little to no overnight relief, and affects anyone without effective cooling and/or adequate hydration,' the agency warned. Meteorologists are describing the intensifying weather pattern as a heat dome, a high-pressure system that traps air and leads to steadily rising thermal readings. Extreme heat is the deadliest weather-related hazard in the United States, leading to more fatalities than natural disasters like hurricanes or tornadoes. For many in the Big Apple, avoiding work in the searing heat was not an option. 'We have to endure it, because otherwise what are we going to survive on?' Manuel, a manual worker repairing a building facade in New York's Harlem neighborhood, told AFP. 'Sometimes we stop because it's a danger. We don't all have the same energy, but you have to endure,' he added. In the Washington Heights neighborhood, authorities opened several fire hydrants so residents could seek relief with the gushing water. One of the local heroes was Ronald Marcelin, a 44-year-old air conditioning technician sweating profusely as he repaired a pizzeria's AC unit. 'I'm taking the heat so that everyone else can cool down,' Marcelin said with a grin. Triple digits The soaring temperatures come just as New Yorkers head to the polls Tuesday - with a forecast high of 102F (39C) - for the Democratic primary that will decide the party's mayoral candidate. It promises to be a tight race between Andrew Cuomo, who is seeking political resurrection after resigning in disgrace as state governor in 2021, and rising left-wing star Zohran Mamdani. Over the weekend, Cuomo urged residents to cast their votes even if the temperatures hit triple digits. In Washington, the heat index - what the temperature feels like with humidity factored in - was forecast to soar as high as 110F (43C) on Monday, and the mayor's office urged residents to take advantage of cooling centers and public swimming pools. Scientists say extreme heat waves are a clear sign of global warming, and they are expected to become more frequent, longer, and more intense. Fueled by human-caused climate change, 2024 was the warmest year on record globally - and 2025 is projected to rank among the top three. — AFP


Arab Times
a day ago
- Arab Times
5.7 magnitude quake strikes near Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, June 24, (Xinhua): A 5.7 magnitude earthquake struck in waters northeast of the Dominican Republic late Monday, causing minor damage. Officials in neighboring Puerto Rico said the quake left some neighborhoods in the northwest town of Utuado without power. The quake hit some 48 miles (77 kilometers) north-northeast of Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, at a depth of 42 miles (about 68 kilometers), according to the US Geological Survey. At least a dozen aftershocks have occurred since then, the agency said. Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic are located in a high seismic activity zone, given that the North American Plate and the northeast corner of the Caribbean plate meet in that area.