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127 killed as mudslides devastate China town

Taishi Ci

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127 killed as mudslides devastate China town

Landslides triggered by torrential summer rains in northwest China killed 127 people and left 2,000 missing in the latest of a series of flood-related disasters to befall northern China where the heaviest rains in a decade have now cost more than 1,400 lives.

By Peter Foster in Beijing
Published: 9:22AM BST 08 Aug 2010


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Rescuers search for missing
Photo: REUTERS

A small county town in a hilly area of Gansu province was smashed by a wave of m&d and debris shortly after midnight on Saturday, according to local reports, with cars being swept down streets that were instantly turned into rivers.

In parts of Zhouqu town the m&d reached as high as the third storey of buildings, with many other smaller single-storey lifted from their foundations by the force of the landslide, according to China Central Television, the state broadcaster. A nearby village of 300 households was also inundated. "Many single-story homes have been wiped out and now we're waiting to see how many people got out," one resident of Zhouqu, a merchant called Han Jiangping said.

China's premier Wen Jiabao travelled to the town, which has a population of 40,000, while nearly 3,000 troops were dispatched to assist with rescue efforts on Sunday morning that were hampered by a metre-thick layer of sludge deposited by the waters.
"The sludge has become the biggest problem to rescue operations," said Diemujiangteng, the head of Zhouqu county who goes by a single name, "It's too thick to walk or drive through." The disaster is the latest to hit north Asia where floods have killed 1,600 in Pakistan and an unknown number in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.

North Korea has also reported widespread damage from flooding on its northern border with China, with thousands of houses and irrigation channels destroyed, while flash floods have also killed at least 132 people in the Himalayan region of Ladakh. Before this weekend's landslides in Gansu, China's civil affairs ministry said that 1,454 people had died in floods in recent weeks and, another 669 were still missing.

More than 12 million had been evacuated from their homes, with total damages estimated at nearly £30 billion.
Zhouqu county, with about 135,000 residents, is a sparsely populated area with often bare, deforested hillsides where ethnic Tibetan herders and farmers who form about one-third of the population graze animals. The landslide was triggered after a night of heavy rain saw large concentrations of water backing up in the town's Bailong River, which flows through a narrow valley and had become partially blocked by an earlier landslide.

On Sunday the floodwaters were starting to recede after explosives were deployed to blast the debris blocking the river, the China News Service said, but further heavy rain was forecast for the upper reaches of the river on Tuesday and Wednesday. The season's unusually severe floods in northwestern China are the latest in a series of extreme weather events to hit the country. Only three months ago millions of people in southwestern China were left short of drinking water after the worst drought in 50 years.


 
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Sakon Shima

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Death toll from NW China mudslides rises to 137


Death toll from NW China mudslides rises to 137

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-08-09 21:24

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Rescue workers provide water for survivors under the debris in mudslide-hit Zhouqu county, Northwest China's Gansu province on Aug 8, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

ZHOUQU, Gansu - The death toll from rain-triggered mudslides in Zhouqu County in northwest China's Gansu Province had risen to 137 as of 4:07 pm Monday with 1,348 still missing, the provincial civil affairs department said Monday. Rescuers are racing against the clock in the search for survivors in the debris of the town flattened by mudslides early Sunday morning.

<table style="font-size: 14px;" border="1"> <tbody></tbody></table>Some 117 people were injured, of whom 28 were severely wounded. Four of them are in critical conditions, according to the provincial health bureau. Four helicopters carrying 20 severely injured residents arrived at a military airport Monday afternoon in Gansu's capital city, Lanzhou, some 650 km from Zhouqu, for admittance to better-equipped hospitals. Twenty more patients will be sent to Lanzhou by Tuesday.

About 45,000 residents have been evacuated, as mudslides have destroyed more than 300 homes and damaged another 700. Moreover, 3,000 homes have been flooded. The Ministry of Civil Affairs dispatched 5,000 sleeping bags to Zhouqu. The ministry has sent four batches of relief supplies, including 5,200 tents, 20,000 cotton coats, and 8,000 folding beds, to Zhouqu.


 

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Landslides strike Zhouqu County, China
At midnight on Sunday, August 8th, a temporary lake caused by a recent landslide broke loose above the town of Zhouqu, in Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China. The outflow slid down the valley as a wall of m&d, wiping out houses and muli-story buildings, and killing at least 1,144 residents - with over 600 still reported as missing. More than 10,000 soldiers and rescuers arrived soon to comb through the mountains of m&d that buried several parts of Zhouqu County. Engineers also worked to blast the debris that had passed through the town to partially block the Bailong River, causing further flooding. Collected here are images of the landslide-affected area of northwestern China, part of a series of disasters in Asia caused by recent heavy rains

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A handout photo received on August 11, 2010 from the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping shows a combo of satellite images showing Zhouqu before (left) in July, 2008 and after the recent landslide (right), taken on August 8, 2010. (AFP/Getty Images)

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An aerial view of the town of Zhouqu shortly after a deadly flood-triggered landslide, seen on August 8, 2010. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)​
 

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A survivor buried under the debris waits to be rescued after devastating landslides hit Zhouqu county on August 8, 2010. (AFP/Getty Images)​
 

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Survivors make their way to evacuate after a devastating flood-triggered landslide hit Zhouqu county, in northwest China's Gansu province on August 8, 2010. Soldiers and rescuers battled on August 9 through an avalanche of sludge and debris as they raced to find survivors of mudslides that killed at least 127 people and left 1,300 missing in northwest China.​
 

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ew of buildings, vehicles and roads hit by mudslides in Zhouqu county, China on Sunday Aug. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Gong Zhiyong)​
 

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An aerial view of the flooding in Zhouqu county after a deadly flood-triggered landslide hit on August 8, 2010. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

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A man holds a family photo as he waits for information about his missing wife in Zhouqu County on August 9, 2010. (REUTERS/Stringer)
 

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The landslide-hit town of Zhouqu in Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu Province, China on August 9, 2010. Chinese rescuers armed with little more than shovels and hoes hunted for survivors of a huge mudslide, as relatives of the missing trekked into the disaster zone to look for their loved ones. (REUTERS/Aly Song)​
 

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A girl stands on the debris of damaged buildings in Zhouqu County China on August 10, 2010. (REUTERS/Stringer)​
 

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Liu Ma Shindan is transported by rescuers in Zhouqu County, China on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010. Liu Ma Shindan, 52, was rescued after being trapped for 50 hours following landslide, Xinhua reported. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Zhang Hongxiang)​
 

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Rescue workers search for survivors in a partially collapsed building in the town of Zhouqu on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)​
 

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Residents carry a landslide victim to a truck in Zhouqu County on August 10, 2010. (REUTERS/Aly Song)​
 

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Residents are carried by a bulldozer across a landslide-hit street in Zhouqu County on August 9, 2010. (REUTERS/Aly Song)​
 

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People on a second-floor balcony help a woman who tries to reach the lower floor, partially buried in m&d, to fetch belongings after a mudslide in Zhouqu county on Monday, Aug. 9, 2010. (AP Photo)​
 

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The foot of a victim killed in a mudslide in Zhouqu County, China on August 9, 2010. (REUTERS/Aly Song)​
 

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A man walks past the decomposing body of a victim at a makeshift outdoor mogue as rescue efforts continue in Zhouqu on August 11, 2010 in northwest China's Gansu province. Hopes of finding survivors of China's worst mudslides in decades is fading as the death toll topped 700, with more than 1,000 people still missing under an avalanche of rock and sludge. More than 10,000 soldiers and rescuers combed through the mountains of m&d that buried a remote area of the northwest province of Gansu at the weekend, but 72 hours after the disaster, the window of survival was quickly closing.​
 
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