Typhoon-triggered flooding disrupts railway services
- Xinhua, August 4, 2012
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Military 
personnel help trapped residents in a flooded area in front of the 
railway station in Qinhuangdao city, in north China's Hebei Province.  | 
A total of 21 trains have been canceled 
for services and nearly 5,000 passengers are still being stranded in 
northeast China's Heilongjiang province after torrential rains triggered
 by Typhoon Damrey swept across the area.
The Railway Bureau of Harbin said as of 
9:00 p.m. Saturday, they have refunded the money spent on 18,125 train 
tickets, but nearly 5,000 passengers are still being stranded in railway
 stations due to heavy rains.
In the city of Anshan, Liaoning 
province, 6,355 residents have been relocated to safety as heavy rains 
have battered the city since Friday morning, the flood control and 
drought relief headquarters said.
It is said that four reservoirs in 
Anshan have released flood water to restrict water levels. And traffic 
on Danhai (Dandong-Haicheng) Highway were interrupted when a collapse 
occurred at a section of a tunnel there.
In Helan township of Liaoyang county, Liaoning province, 66 residents were trapped in waters on Saturday morning.
The provincial flood control and drought
 relief headquarters has dispatched helicopters and rescue vessels to 
pull 62 people from flood, but other four persons are still being 
trapped.
The services of a major local railway 
that links Liaoning's capital city Shenyang with the port city of Dalian
 was suspended after a section was submerged under water at about 2 a.m.
 This led to the delay of about 10 trains, the Shenyang railway bureau 
said in a statement.
Flooding also caused the collapse of a 
railway bed on a section of the Shenyang-Shanhaiguan line. This forced 
the suspension of more than half a dozen bullet trains running from 
Liaoning to other major cities.
Two sections of other railway, which 
links Shenyang with Dandong, a border city in Liaoning, were inundated 
in flood water at about 9:50 a.m., disrupting train services.
The rain also affected traffic on 18 major highways in Liaoning.
One person was killed and another five 
missing Friday night in Dalian when flood waters collapsed a bridge, the
 local government said.
Flooding also has forced the evacuation of 88,773 people in the province.
According to statistics released by the 
civil affairs department of eastern Shandong province, Damrey have left 
more than 2 million people affected and five people dead.
After Typhoon Damrey lashed the 
province, about 200,000 hectare croplands were damaged, 1,718 houses 
were collapsed and the direct economic losses totaled 1.69 billion yuan 
(265.2 million U.S. dollars).
Two typhoons, Damrey and Saola, made 
landfalls in east China Friday, something rarely seen in the country, 
bringing strong gales and heavy rainstorms.
The typhoons had left five people dead 
and one missing and forced the evacuation of 932,000 residents in 
provinces of Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian and Shandong by Saturday morning,
 according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
http://www.china.org.cn/china/2012-08/04/content_26125702.htm 

 






 
 
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