

Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau issued a warning and said heavy rain or extremely heavy rain will affect Taipei City and other northern parts of the island through Thursday night. Just as the rainstorms are winding down, Typhoon In-Fa is approaching Taiwan and the coastal provinces in southeastern mainland China. The rains in Henan will start to weaken on Thursday night, according to the China Meteorological Administration. Some were able to return to their point of departure, while other passengers had to be rescued at the point where they had been stranded, according to local newspaper Henan Daily. Zhengzhou is a major hub for China's railway network and some trains were stuck on the tracks for as long as 40 hours, prompting rescuers to send passengers food and water. Water, electricity and gas supplies were also cut and more than 40 temporary sites were set up in the city to provide clean water. Along with flooding subway stations and stranding trains, the rains collapsed roads and disrupted rail and air transport. Zhengzhou, a city of 12 million people, saw drier conditions on Thursday, although large parts of the city remained underwater. At least 15 people were killed after heavy rain and flooding battered China’s northern province of Shanxi, destroying thousands of homes and forcing more than 120,000 people to relocate to. Public transport in Anyang has been suspended and people were asked to work from home on Thursday, state broadcaster CCTV reported. Flooding in China Landslide kills 16 in northwest China 01:33 - 7:00PM Heatwaves scorch Chinese cities 01:22 - 1:42PM 3.75 million people impacted by floods in China.
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Outside help was not arriving and residents were relying on themselves, those postings said. Live reporting by Jess Sharp 07:27:11 Watch: Ukraine preps for nuclear incident Nuclear disaster response drills were carried out by Ukraine in the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region yesterday. Get the latest Asian news from BBC News in Asia: breaking news, features, analysis and special reports plus audio and video from across the Asian continent. Residents took to social media to seek assistance as lakes and rivers overflowed and water and electricity were cut. The floods, which have caused disruptions at 60 coal mines in Shanxi Province, have exposed the vulnerability of China’s energy supply. Tens of millions of people across swaths of eastern China were bracing for floods, torrential rains and towering waves on Wednesday, as the most powerful typhoon of the season so far made. Firefighters were using boats to transport trapped residents.Duration 0:58 Thousands of people are being rescued from waist-high water in China's central city of Zhengzhou after catastrophic floods hit. Images showed flooding had submerged three-metre-high signs and buildings several storeys high.

In Chongqing, roads, bridges, parks and a main highway in the commercial district were flooded, affecting 260,000 people and damaging at least 20,000 businesses, according to officials. On Thursday, levels along the Yangtze near Chongqing reached heights not seen since 1981, when the country experienced its worst floods in a century, leaving 1.5 million homeless.

Upstream from the dam, officials in the city of Chongqing, in Sichuan province, evacuated almost 300,000 residents before the flooding. “The standard of construction of the dam is high and it can resist large floods,” it said. This week the ministry of water resources said the standard of construction meant 111 large reservoirs upstream from the dam could help lessen pressure on the structure. The flooding is predicted to last about five days.

Officials expect water levels in the reservoir, whose dam was built to withstand a water level of 175 metres, to reach 165.5 metres on Saturday. The Three Gorges dam, which can handle inflows of about 98.8m litres a second, is already approaching its capacity. After two months of heavy floods across central and south-west China, officials have promised the dam can withstand the flows.Ī breach of the dam, a controversial and unprecedented feat of engineering along the Yangtze River, would be embarrassing for China, which took 12 years to build the megaproject, displacing millions and submerging swathes of land.
