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WEATHER REPORT
Torrential rains kill at least 27 in China
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 19, 2011

At least 27 people have died and dozens are missing after torrential rains and flooding in north and southwest China forced hundreds of thousands to evacuate their homes, state press said Monday.

Unprecedented rains since last Friday have swamped huge portions of Sichuan province in China's southwest, with the region braced for further disaster as downpours continue and rivers swell, Xinhua news agency said.

Officials in Sichuan's Dazhou and Guangan regions have ordered the evacuation of over 600,000 people as major tributaries to the Yangtze, China's longest river, surpass dangerous levels, it said.

The Jialing river had already risen above alert levels by nearly seven metres (23 feet) and waters were expected to rise to the highest levels since record keeping began in 1847, the report said.

Since Friday, torrential rains have left 13 people dead and 10 missing in three northeastern Sichuan counties, it said.

The floods and rains have led to the collapse of over 2,000 homes and damage to 10,000 others, it added.

Meanwhile in Shaanxi province, just north of Sichuan, the toll from a massive Saturday rain-triggered landslide rose to at least 14 dead and 18 missing, Xinhua said in a separate dispatch.

The fatalities occurred when thousands of tonnes of rock and mud buried a brick factory and parts of a ceramics plant in the Banqiao district of the provincial capital of Xian, the report said.

China is hit by big downpours every summer. Last year saw the nation's worst flooding in a decade, leaving more than 4,300 people dead or missing.

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Landslide fears as typhoon churns towards Japan
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 19, 2011 - Forecasters warned Monday of torrential rain and urged people to watch out for landslides and flash flooding as Typhoon Roke churned towards western Japan.

With strong winds of up to 162 kilometres (100 miles) per hour, the typhoon was moving slowly north off Amami Island in the Pacific and towards the western part of the main island of Honshu, the meteorological agency said.

It urged residents to be especially vigilant in the Kii Peninsula in western Japan, where nearly 100 people were killed or missing after Typhoon Talas hit on September 3.





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WEATHER REPORT
Obama declares emergency as floods swamp US
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (AFP) Sept 9, 2011
US President Barack Obama declared an emergency Friday as floods swamped areas of the US northeast, killing up to five people and forcing 100,000 to flee their homes. The National Weather Service (NWS) issued a flash flood warning for counties in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Maryland and Virginia, as towns became inundated, busy highways closed down and commuter lines bac ... read more


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