A shoes is seen after floods and
landslides hit a village in Jiulong County, Southwest China's Sichuan
Province, May 25, 2005. [Xinhua]
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CHENGDU -- Disasters triggered by
rainstorm have killed at least 43 people in southwest China's Sichuan Province
and Chongqing Municipality over the past week, the local government confirmed on
Saturday.
A massive mud-rock flow in the county of Jiulong, in the Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture of Garze, in western Sichuan, killed 12 villagers and injured another
18 following heavy rainfall Thursday and Friday, a spokesman with the county
government said.
Heavy rainfall also caused a landslide in Shimian County in Sichuan's central
western city of Ya'an, where a bus was knocked off a highway by a falling rock
on Friday night, killing nine people and injuring 14.
The city government of Ya'an closed the Shimian section of the highway for a
safety overhaul on Saturday.
An earlier report said a landslide triggered by rainstorm last Sunday killed
seven and left three missing in Leibo County of the Liangshan Yi Autonomous
Prefecture.
The 10 victims, including three men and seven women, were from farming
families of the Yi minority. The youngest was only two years old, said Zhou
Gaopeng, director of the county's disaster relief office.
At least five people were killed by lightning strikes between Sunday and
Wednesday in the disaster-hit areas in western Sichuan, the provincial
government said.
It said nine people remained missing after being washed away by mountain
torrents or mud slides.
In the neighboring Chongqing Municipality, seven children died and 44 were
injured on Wednesday when lightning struck their schoolroom in the village of
Xingye more than 300 km from downtown Chongqing.
Three adults also died in Chongqing when the most destructive rainstorm so
far this year hit the eastern and southeastern suburbs on Wednesday, two of whom
were killed by lightning, the other died after he was buried under ruins of his
toppled house.
The rain in Chongqing lasted for 32 hours, making it necessary to evacuate
112,300 people from their homes and caused a direct economic loss of 573 million
yuan (73.5 million U.S. dollars), the municipal government said.
Ministry of Civil Affairs sent a relief team to the disaster-hit areas on
Saturday, bringing tents, quilts, clothing, food and medication.
The ministry said about 32,000 people had been relocated as rainstorms
inundated 500 houses and damaged 5,800 dwellings in Sichuan.
In Jiulong county alone, about 16,200 people were affected by the disaster,
which destroyed 1,300 hectares of farmland, washed away 2,175 head of cattle and
toppled more than 3,000 houses.
The ministry placed Sichuan's direct economic losses at 58 million yuan (7.4
million U.S. dollars).
The disaster also destroyed more than 4,000 meters of a pivotal highway
linking the western outback with Sichuan's provincial capital Chengdu, and
traffic has yet to resume as of Saturday.