. 24/7 Space News .
50 Confirmed Dead In China Landslide As Typhoon Toll Rises

This 01 October, 2005 NASA satellite image shows Typhoon Longwang. Almost 60 people are missing after a landslide crashed onto a military police training centre in southeast China, state media reported 03 October. The landslide, triggered by torrential rain brought by Typhoon Longwang, buried two residential buildings at the centre in Fujian province leaving 59 police missing, Xinhua news agency said. AFP photo /HO/NASA.

Beijing (AFP) Oct 04, 2005
Fifty bodies have been found after a landslide hit a police academy in southeastern China, state media reported late Tuesday, as Typhoon Longwang continued to batter parts of the country.

Another 36 people remain missing after torrential rain sent torrents of mud crashing down a hillside into the Fuzhou Command School of Armed Police in Fujian province Sunday, the Xinhua news agency said.

More than 7,000 soldiers, police and local residents have been engaged in a massive rescue operation, it said. Xinhua reported Monday that 59 police trainees were missing following the landslide.

The deaths bring to at least 65 the number of people killed in China by Typhoon Longwang, which continued to bring wild weather to other parts of the country earlier Tuesday.

President Hu Jintao ordered an all-out effort to find the missing after Sunday's landslide, and military and police teams were coordinating operations, Xinhua said.

As rumours swirled of a higher death toll, local media at the scene said they had been instructed not to report the incident, with details only being released through state-controlled Xinhua.

Longwang landed in Fujian on Sunday night after leaving at least one dead in Taiwan. At least 15 people were confirmed dead in incidents other than the landslide, according to the website of the Fujian provincial Water Works Office.

The storm, which has weakened to a tropical depression, forced the evacuation of nearly 600,000 people in Fujian and Guangdong provinces, with 5,500 houses destroyed and vast tracts of farmland ruined.

Economic damage was estimated at 150 million dollars, the China Daily reported, with the tourism sector bearing the brunt on what would normally have been one of the busiest times of the year during the National Day holiday.

In the Fujian capital Fuzhou, water rose to a depth of two metres (6.6 feet) in some areas after a nearby river flooded, paralyzing the city's transport system.

Serious flooding was also reported in central and northern China, with at least three people killed in Shaanxi province, which has been pounded by heavy rain for a week.

Two of the dead were students swept away by flood waters in Xixiang county. Nearly 1,000 houses have been toppled and some 17,000 people forced from their homes, said Tan Cewu, director of the Shaanxi Provincial Water Conservation Department.

In the central province of Hubei, 13,000 residents fled rising waters along the banks of a tributary of the Yangtze River in Wuhan city, Xinhua reported.

Heavy rain has been pounding the Danjiangkou Reservoir along the upper reaches of the Hanjiang River since Thursday, flooding some counties and cutting off several roads in the area.

By Tuesday night water levels in the reservoir had risen a half-meter above the danger mark, flood control officials in Hubei province told Xinhua.

"The flood is still under control though it seems still severe," said Cai Qihua, deputy director of the flood control headquarters of the Yangtze River.

More heavy rain is forecast in the days ahead.

Floods have always been part of life in China, although officials have said this year has been more devastating than usual.

Official figures released at the end of August showed floods had killed 1,024 people and left another 293 missing in China this year. More than 150 million people have been affected.

Since serious flooding of the Yangtze River in 1998, China has spent billions of dollars on flood mitigation.

Major rivers have been brought under greater control and early warning systems have been put in place, but flash floods and landslides caused by unprecedented rains continue to cause major damage.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Bush Says Business Sector Must Cover Cost Of Post-Katrina Recovery
Washington (AFP) Oct 04, 2005
US President George W. Bush on Tuesday said private business will have to pick up much of the tab for rebuilding New Orleans and other Gulf Coast areas destroyed by Hurricane Katrina, saying there are limits to what the federal government can afford to pay.







  • Brazil, Russia Agree To Send Brazilian Cosmonaut To Space
  • US 'Space Tourist' Blasts Off Aboard Soyuz
  • NASA Takes Google On Journey Into Space
  • Riding A Ribbon To Space A Thousand Feet Closer

  • Mars Rovers May Yet Make Major Discoveries
  • Spirit Reaches True Summit
  • Desert RATS Test Robotic Rover
  • Sailing The Planets: Exploring Mars With Guided Balloons

  • Russian Launch Services Seeks Partners For Its Converted Start-1 Rocket Venture
  • CryoSat Ready To Be Launched
  • Arianespace To Launch Syracuse 3A And Galaxy 15 On October 13
  • Moscow, Seoul To Cooperate In Space Exploration

  • Predicting Where Flooding Will Occur In The West
  • MERIS/AATSR Workshop Looks At Twin Sensors With Many Uses
  • Health Of Coral Reefs Detected From Orbit
  • A Space Station View On Giant Lightning

  • The PI's Perspective: Changes in Latitude
  • New Class of Satellites Discovered As Moon Discovered Orbiting 10th Planet
  • Tenth Planet Has A Moon
  • NASA'S Pluto Space Probe Begins Launch Preparations

  • Our Three-Brane Existence
  • Pop Goes The Star
  • Supernova Waves Rolled Over Mammoths
  • Mature Galaxy Found In Early Universe Eight Times More Massive Than Milky Way

  • NASA Selects Team To Build Lunar Lander
  • SMART-1 Set For More Lunar Science
  • Not Your Average Moonshot
  • Digging "Moon Dirt" Is NASA's Fifth Centennial Challenge

  • Navicom GPS Details q Network And New GPS Tracking Unit
  • Navman Announces The New iCN 550 High-End Portable Guidance System
  • Garmin Is Tier-One Supplier For Honda Motorcycle GPS Navigation System
  • Tiger Telematics Prepare For US Launch And Listing On NASDAQ National Market

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement