Heavy rain across China has left at least 28 people dead and 66 missing, officials reported yesterday, after landslides crushed homes, bridges collapsed and dozens of villages were cut off.
The storms, which began on Sunday, have affected more than 3 million people, the Chinese Ministry of Civil Affairs said on its Web site.
Nearly half of those — 1.45 million people — were in Sichuan, where 62 were missing, the government of the southwestern province said on its Sina Weibo microblogging account.
At least 18 people died after a landslide on Wednesday engulfed homes in Zhongxing in the province, Xinhua news agency reported yesterday, citing local authorities.
Footage on state broadcaster CCTV showed a wide rush of muddy water, though a reporter said levels had fallen.
Another 12 people were unaccounted for on Wednesday after landslides at a village in Mianyang in the province, the Sichuan government said.
Twelve others and six vehicles were still missing after a bridge in Jiangyou City collapsed into the rushing waters on Tuesday — one of three such incidents in Sichuan.
Other deaths spanned the country, from Beijing to the central province of Henan and Xinjiang in the far west, ministry figures showed.
About 2,000 people trapped in a tunnel by another landslide in Sichuan were rescued on Wednesday, with television footage showing crowds walking down the middle of a road.
Emergency teams were working to clear a landslide on a road to Beichuan County that had left 40 villages cut off.
In 2008, Beichuan was the epicenter of China’s deadliest earthquake in three decades — an 8-magnitude tremor that left more than 87,000 people dead.
Altogether, about 110,000 Sichuan residents have been relocated because of the storms, the provincial government said on Weibo, adding that it was still collating the total damage.
Officials in Zhongxing and the provincial capital, Chengdu, declined to comment when contacted by reporters.
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