City
Epaper

Heavy downpours affect over 100,000 in China's Sichuan

By IANS | Updated: August 9, 2021 13:05 IST

Beijing, Aug 9 Torrential rains have affected more than 100,000 residents in China's Sichuan province and forced the ...

Open in App

Beijing, Aug 9 Torrential rains have affected more than 100,000 residents in China's Sichuan province and forced the emergency evacuation of over 7,000 people, local authorities said.

The heavy downpours lashed the northeastern part of Sichuan, including the cities of Bazhong, Nanchong and Dazhou, from 8 a.m. Saturday to 8 a.m. Sunday, flooding roads and raising water levels of several local rivers above warning levels, according to the Sichuan provincial water resources department.

A monitoring station in Yingshan County, under Nanchong, saw precipitation of 424.8 mm in the 24-hour period, Xinhua news agency quoted the Department as saying.

Disaster relief and rescue efforts are underway.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: beijingXinhuaNanchong
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalMajor UK Railway Stations Hit by Cyber Attack; Network Rail Suspends Wi-Fi Service

InternationalBeijing on Orange Alert As Heavy Rain and Strong Winds Batter City

Social ViralChina: Glass Maintenance Workers Trapped Hanging From Building in Beijing After Sudden Strong Winds; Video Surfaces

InternationalTaiwan’s Attempt to Restrict China Trips by Legislators Fails

InternationalChinese hackers breach emails of US Commerce Secretary Raimondo, State Department officials

International Realted Stories

InternationalAfter 20 hours, Israeli firefighters bring wildfires under control

InternationalPoGB lawyers extend strike, threaten to block Karakoram highway amid judicial paralysis

InternationalIsrael-India partnership advances new osteoarthritis treatment

InternationalUK government's state-owned energy venture to ban solar panels made with Chinese slave labour

InternationalJamia Hamdard hosts discussion on Nalanda's impact on modern knowledge