China landslide leaves 21 missing amid floods

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A landslide caused by rains in southern China left 21 people missing, adding to a growing death toll from China's worst flood season in a decade, with more heavy rains expected.
Image: Rain-triggered landslide in China
Residents examine the site of a rain-triggered landslide in Shuanghe, China, on Tuesday.Reuters

A landslide caused by rains in southern China left 21 people missing Tuesday, adding to a growing death toll from China's worst flood season in a decade, which is expected to worsen with heavy rains forecast across the country.

Rescuers searched for 21 people missing after a landslide in Shuanghe, a town in China's southern province of Sichuan on Tuesday morning, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Rocks and mud from a normally forested hillside buried dozens of multistoried apartments and about 4,000 villagers were evacuated from their homes.

Police found three survivors, including an 80-year-old, Xinhua said.

Floods this year have already killed at least 823 people, left 437 missing and caused tens of billions of dollars in damage, the State Flood Control and Drought Prevention reported.

It said two dozen major rivers had risen beyond their warning levels, with workers scrambling to sandbag riverbanks along the Yellow, Jialing, Han, Huai and Yangtze rivers to prevent further flooding, the report said. Water levels along the middle reaches of the Huai River, notorious for flooding, were 5 feet above its warning level in the provinces of Anhui and Henan.

Three-quarters of China's provinces have been plagued by flooding and 25 rivers have seen record-high water levels, the Flood Prevention Agency said. The overall damage totaled 154.1 billion yuan ($22 billion).

Flooding this year has overwhelmed reservoirs, swamped towns and cities, and caused landslides that have smothered communities, including toppling 680,000 houses, Xinhua reported.

The water level in the massive Three Gorges Dam — the world's largest hydroelectric project which was also built to end centuries of floods along the Yangtze River basin — hit its highest level ever last week.

More torrential rains are expected for the southwest, southeast and northeastern parts of the country through Wednesday, the National Meteorological Center said.

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