China launches emergency response for flood-hit regions

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China on Sunday activated a level-IV emergency response, the lowest in the country's four-tier warning system after rainstorms triggered floods in central and southwestern regions of China, the Ministry of Emergency Management (MEM) said.

XinhuaUpdated: June 29, 2020

China on Sunday activated a level-IV emergency response, the lowest in the country's four-tier warning system after rainstorms triggered floods in central and southwestern regions of China, the Ministry of Emergency Management (MEM) said.

Photo taken on June 8, 2020 shows a flood-triggered landslide site in Helukou township of Jianghua Yao autonomous county, central China's Hunan province. [Photo/Xinhua]

The China National Commission for Disaster Reduction and the MEM have sent special work teams to major disaster areas in the provinces of Sichuan, Guizhou and Hunan to provide guidance in disaster relief.

Since the beginning of June, the floods had affected about 12 million people, leaving 78 people dead or missing. Over 8,000 houses collapsed while 97,000 houses were damaged in 13 provincial-level regions.

Direct economic losses amounted to 25.7 billion yuan (about US$3.64 billion), according to the ministry.