Flooding kills at least 38 as Beijing region gets almost a year's worth of rain

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The dayslong rainstorms have killed 30 people in the Chinese capital and eight in its neighboring province of Hebei, state-run broadcaster CCTV said.
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BEIJING — At least 38 people have died in the Chinese capital region after it was battered by almost a year’s worth of rain in a handful of days, setting off flooding and landslides, cutting off power and forcing the evacuations of tens of thousands of people.

The heaviest toll was reported in the Chinese capital, Beijing, where 30 people died, followed by its neighboring province of Hebei, where eight died, state-run broadcaster CCTV reported Tuesday.

Intense rainstorms started to hit many parts of northern China as early as Friday, according to the country’s Meteorological Administration.

Emergency Rescue, Relief Efforts Underway In Flood-hit Beijing Suburbs
Villagers waiting to be evacuated at Liulimiao Town in Beijing’s Huairou District on Tuesday. Zhao Wenyu / China News Service via Getty Images

Chinese President Xi Jinping said in an order Monday that the country was at a “critical” stage of its summer flood season and urged local officials to prioritize saving lives.

The Chinese central government said Tuesday that it had allocated 350 million yuan ($48 million) in disaster relief funds to flood-struck places such as Beijing and Hebei.

The heaviest downpours in Beijing were in the mountainous northern districts of Miyun, where 28 people died, and Yanqing, where two died, officials said Tuesday, calling the extreme weather event “rare and highly destructive.”

By midnight Monday, parts of Miyun had received up to about 21 inches of rain, the state-backed newspaper Beijing News reported, almost as much as the approximately 23 inches Beijing gets all year.

The rain prompted Beijing officials to issue the highest level of rainstorm alert for the first time this year.

The rain damaged over 30 sections of road and cut off power in more than 130 villages, and about 80,000 Beijing residents were evacuated to safety, CCTV said.

CHINA-ENVIRONMENT-WEATHER-FLOODS
Submerged residential buildings after heavy rain in the village of Taishitun in Miyun district Sunday.Jade Gao / AFP via Getty Images

A man surnamed Dong, whose home in Miyun district was flooded, said the waters carried away his washing machine and two cars.

“I’m 70, and I’ve never seen such a big flood,” Dong told Sky News on Tuesday.

“If me and my wife didn’t climb up to the roof, it would be over for us,” he added.

TOPSHOT-CHINA-ENVIRONMENT-WEATHER-FLOODS
Residents ride on a front loader to cross a flooded street in Taishitun village on Sunday.Jade Gao / AFP via Getty Images

Li Xiaoya, 27, an editor in Beijing, said he was on a weekend trip to Miyun with his friends when they were awakened early Sunday by their homestay host and told to evacuate.

“I stepped outside only to find that the streets were flooded,” Li told NBC News via messaging app Tuesday. “I waded through the water to reach the main road, where I saw that most of the villagers had already evacuated to higher ground.”

Li and his fellow travelers drove back to the city safely when daylight broke and the water level largely dropped.

At 7 a.m. Tuesday local time (7 p.m. Monday ET), Beijing had lowered its rainstorm alert, allowing parks and tourist attractions to reopen.

CHINA-WEATHER-FLOOD
Debris and damaged cars in a flooded neighborhood in Miyun district Tuesday.Adek Berry / AFP via Getty Images

While the extreme weather in the north is set to gradually weaken, heavy rain will shift to eastern China as the coastal region braces for Typhoon Co-may, which is expected to land Wednesday, CCTV reported.

Beijing frequently floods in the summer. In 2023, severe flooding in the city killed at least 33 people, according to the state-run newspaper People’s Daily.

Fred Dufour reported from Beijing and Peter Guo and Eve Qiao from Hong Kong.

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