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People sit on a makeshift raft made with a bag of plastic bottles on a flooded street in Jintang county, Chengdu, Sichuan province, on July 11. Photo: Reuters

Unusually rainy summer puts China flood toll at 337 dead

AP

Flooding in China this year has left at least 337 people dead and 213 missing, due mainly to unusually wet summer weather, the government said on Sunday.

Floods this year have struck across 30 provinces and municipalities and affected more than 47 million people, according to the Office of State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters.

The headquarters said landslides have accounted for 202, or about 60 per cent, of the confirmed deaths.

China saw an average of 165.4mm of rain between June 1 and July 15. That was 5 per cent more than usual and the most during that period in five years. Central China has been hardest hit, receiving 40.1 per cent more rain than usual during that six-week period.

China’s worst floods in recent history were in 1998, when 4,150 people died, most along the Yangtze River, China’s mightiest.

The Three Gorges Dam, the world’s largest hydropower project, was intended to control renewed flooding along the river. But water levels in the massive reservoir behind the dam stood at more than 149 metres on Sunday, four metres above the flood warning mark.

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