Chinese river at highest level in 55 years
18 June BBC
A flooded river in eastern China is at its highest level in
more than 50 years, the government said Friday as thousands of train
passengers were stranded after landslides buried parts of a railway line
in the southwest.
Flooding in China over the past two weeks has left more than 170
people dead or missing and forced thousands of people to leave homes in
regions along the Yangtze River.
The landslides and mudslides have toppled homes, and the torrential
rains that caused them are forecast to continue.
Landslides crushed parts of a railway line in southwestern China,
stranding 5,000 passengers on four trains overnight and affecting train
service, local railway authorities said Friday.
Over 2,000 rescuers with 10 excavators rushed to clear the
Chengdu-Kunming railway, which links the provincial capitals of Sichuan
and Yunnan, the Chengdu Railway Bureau said in a statement, according to
the state-run Xinhua News Agency.
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