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China's Vice Premier Calls For Flood Prevention

A man paddles his boat in flood-stricken Qingyuan, 18 July 2006, in southern China's Guangdong province. Rescue workers continue searching for 140 people still missing in China from severe tropical storm Bilis, amid fears the death toll could rise well past 188. The storm which claimed the lives of dozens of people in the Philippines and Taiwan, has killed at least 188 people in China after striking the mainland on 14 July, affecting more than 20 million people, with about 2.2 million evacuated from dangerous locations and economic losses reaching 11.8 billion yuan (1.5 billion dollars). Some 910,000 hectares (2.2 million acres) of crops were flooded, with 160,000 hectares completely destroyed, China's Ministry of Civil Affairs said. AFP Photo China Out Getty Out
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jul 19, 2006
Six more people were confirmed dead in China to bring the death toll from rainstorms and flooding triggered by Tropical Storm Bilis to 204, state media said Wednesday. As the death toll rose, Vice Premier Hui Liangyu urged governments in the affected provinces to do their utmost to prevent the spread of disease, Xinhua news agency said.

He also called on officials to ensure the displaced were cared for, to help them rebuild destroyed homes and to assist farmers in replanting destroyed fields, Xinhua said.

Paramilitary troops were dispatched to major rivers to pile sandbags along the banks.

Details of how flooding had affected prisons also emerged, with Xinhua saying more than 4,200 inmates had to be brought out while wardens scrambled to maintain control without power, water or adequate food.

The prisoners were stranded in two prisons in Shaoguan city of Guangdong province for about two days, Xinhua said.

Twenty wardens managed to bring food and water to the inmates evacuated from one jail on Saturday when some 30 prisoners began to show symptoms of stomach problems and skin diseases, it said.

Bilis, which claimed dozens of lives in the Philippines and Taiwan, has been sweeping China since Friday, bringing torrential rain and flooding to several provinces in southern, eastern and central parts of the country.

The civil affairs ministry said Tuesday 155 people were still missing.

More than 25.4 million people were affected with about 2.45 million people evacuated from dangerous locations and economic losses reaching 15.9 billion yuan (1.98 billion dollars), the ministry said.

Some 208,000 homes collapsed while 282,000 were damaged, it said.

The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters has sent a dozen task forces to check flood prevention and control efforts along major rivers, Xinhua said Wednesday.

In Guangdong water levels at eight large reservoirs have exceeded the danger limit with six others approaching the warning line.

Heavy rain and severe floods also destroyed sections of many highways and railways in southern China.

China's flood season from June to August usually sees overflowing rivers and mountain torrents, often causing deadly landslides.

By Wednesday the tropical storm was dying down and moving to Guizhou and Yunnan provinces in the southwest.

More typhoons or tropical rainstorms are expected to hit China this year, partly due to the warm ocean current in the northwestern Pacific and high temperatures in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, meteorologists were quoted by Xinhua as saying.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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