Thursday, July 22, 2010

Typhoon lashes south China with heavy rain, winds




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BEIJING — Typhoon Chanthu sent debris flying through the air in southern China's Guangdong province on Thursday, bringing rain that could aggravate the country's worst floods in a decade.

No casualties have been reported so far from Chanthu, which was upgraded from a tropical storm one day earlier. Authorities urged residents to stay indoors as winds reached up to 70 miles per hour (115 kilometers per hour).




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People fill up a hole on a dyke soaked by weeks of flooding in Xingzi county, in central China's Jiangxi province, Sunday, July 18, 2010. At least 146 people have died and 40 remain missing from the floods and landslides caused by heavy rainfalls in China in July, the state news agency Xinhua reported.

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In this photo released by China's Xinhua news agency, flood water is released from the Three Gorges Dam's floodgates in Yichang, in central China's Hubei province, Tuesday, July 20, 2010. Rescuers were searching Tuesday for 30 people buried in landslides as flood waters from days of heavy rain surged past the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest

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n this photo provided by China's Xinhua News Agency, a man struggles his way in the flooded field in Tieling County, north China's Liaoning Province, Wednesday, July 21, 2010. More than 1,000 people have died or disappeared in severe flooding in China so far this year, and the heaviest rains are still to come, a senior official warned Wednesday.

The storm comes as China grapples with severe flooding that has left more than 701 people dead and 347 missing so far this year, according to the flood prevention agency. The death toll is the highest since 1998, when more than 4,000 people died. Damages are in the tens of billions of dollars.

In Guangdong, floods have killed more than a dozen people and forced the evacuation of tens of thousands, the state-run Xinhua News Agency has said. Landslides triggered by heavy rains crushed homes and floods have wiped out crops across the province since June.

Chanthu reached Leizhou city in Guangdong early Thursday and was rumbling north along the coast of Guangdong's southern tip, China's Meteorological Administration said. The storm was expected to travel farther inland toward the Guangxi region later in the day, the administration said.

State broadcaster CCTV's noon broadcast showed intense winds tossing around large pieces of debris and objects such as pipes and shingles in Maoming prefecture. Two people were killed in southern China last week by falling debris from Typhoon Conson.

Calls to the Guangdong provincial government office rang unanswered on Thursday.

More torrential rains are expected across China this week, in provinces ranging from Yunnan in the southwest to Jilin in the northeast.







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