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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

More floods, slides expected

An eldery man grieves at the site of a mudslide that swept away part of the town of Zhouqu in northwest China's Gansu province on Thursday.  (Associated Press)
David Wivell Associated Press

ZHOUQU, China – A relentless downpour threatened to trigger more landslides today and made rescue work nearly impossible in the remote northwestern China region where hundreds died in massive slides triggered by weekend flooding.

Heavy rains were forecast for flood-ravaged Gansu province in the coming days – up to 3.5 inches was expected today – and the National Weather Center said the threat of more landslides along the Bailong River was “relatively large.”

Tents set up as emergency shelters were flooded, and traumatized victims said the ongoing storms were a frightening reminder of the deluge that brought on last Sunday’s disaster in which three villages in Gansu’s Zhouqu district were swallowed in waves of mud and rubble-strewn water. Hundreds of homes were completely buried, and the death toll was 1,144.

The overnight deluge triggered new mudslides late Thursday in Longnan city, close to Zhouqu, killing nine and leaving nine others missing, the official Xinhua News Agency said, citing local authorities in Gansu province.

Meanwhile, mudslides also hit parts of southwest China’s Sichuan province killing five people and leaving 500 people trapped, Xinhua said today.

Government officials say the scale of the disaster has made counting the dead all the more difficult, noting whole households have died. Bodies were wrapped in blankets and tied to sticks or placed on planks and left on the debris-strewn streets for pickup.

Crews had been using hand tools to pull out survivors but roads reopened Wednesday, allowing in heavy earth-moving equipment and supplies.

Clean drinking water was a primary concern, with most local sources knocked out or too polluted to use. State media reported numerous cases of dysentery, but there were no reports of an epidemic outbreak.

At least 45,000 people have evacuated their homes, and the Ministry of Civil Affairs reported the delivery of 30,000 tents to the area, with thousands more on the way.

Flooding in China has killed more than 2,000 people this year and caused tens of billions of dollars in damage across 28 provinces and regions.