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          China / Cover Story

          Death and destruction in 20 hours

          By He Na and Cao Yin (China Daily) Updated: 2012-07-23 07:44

          Waterlogged communities

          Death and destruction in 20 hours

          Wangchunyuan community is located close to Lishui Bridge in Beijing's Chaoyang district. It resembled a lake on Saturday but was slowly returning to normal as the waters receded on Sunday morning.

          "The water came up to my waist," said Zheng Fengxuan, as he attempted to clean his car after it had spent a day submerged. "The drainage system around the community has had some problems recently. We reported them, but nothing was done to rectify them."

          Zhu Ning, who also lives in the community, was not as lucky as Zheng whose car still worked despite its soaking on Saturday. "My car's engine doesn't work anymore," said Zhu. "The water came as high as the headlights on Saturday evening," she said, before shouting to her husband to call the insurance company.

          "Our community was like a large pond last night. The water was about a meter deep, lapping at the sides of the cars in the parking lots," said Wei Xiaobo, one of the security guards for the community.

          The ground around the community's north gate is lower-lying than most of the surrounding area, and so the water converged there. There was so much water that the drainage systems simply couldn't cope, he said.

          Another resident, Li Ming, 29, pointed to a white flatbed truck, used for recycling. He said a sofa on back of the truck was washed away by the force of the water and that one of the residents, a foreigner, had taken to the waters to swim to a local supermarket to buy food for dinner.

          "At midnight, the rain began to ease off and some emergency vehicles arrived," said Li, who added that members of the emergency services were forced to crack a hole in a sewer pipe, about 30 meters from the community's north gate, to speed up the rate of drainage.

          Subway

          The storm paralyzed almost all ground transport. Many roads below overpasses lay under water up to a meter deep, leaving many motorists stranded.

          The water also leaked into the subway at some points. Services were suspended at a number of stations because of minor flooding. Generally, however, the system operated normally.

          In Chaoyang district, the heavy downpour caused the collapse of a construction site on subway Line 6. Dozens of workers raced to the scene to carry out repairs, preventing major damage to the system.

          Suburban rescue

          Some 30,000 people stranded in mountainous regions on the outskirts of the capital were rescued and transferred to safe areas. Across the city, more than 100,000 volunteers and government workers rushed to deal with the emergency, according to the Beijing flood control and drought relief headquarters.

          The heavy rain also triggered landslides in some mountainous areas.

          Li Fanghong, a police station director, was killed as he helped residents of one of the worst-hit areas, Fenghuangting village. Li accidentally touched a live electric cable as he and his colleagues fought to rescue more than 50 people trapped by the rising waters.

          The deluge also triggered mountain torrents in Fangshan district, cutting off some 400 people, students and teachers at a military training site. Because the roads were impassable, soldiers made their way to the spot on foot and, aided by the emergency services, rescued all the students and teachers without injury.

          Flights grounded

          Roughly 525 flights in and out of Beijing Capital International Airport were delayed, leaving around 80,000 travelers stranded. "The airport has undergone a terrible ordeal," said Li Xiaomei, a spokeswoman, who added that the storm had affected traffic in the air and on the ground.

          The Airport Express line was suspended at 7:50 on Saturday evening because the water covering the tracks resulted in a power outage. Services resumed at 10:20 pm.

          Death and destruction in 20 hours

          Cai Dongyi, from Longquan township in the Mentougou district of Beijing, walks through a pile of rubble.[Photo/China Daily]

          Taxi services were also severely affected, leaving a critical shortage at the airport. "We allocated 170 airport buses to ferry passengers away from the airport overnight. The airport has never put such a great number of buses into service before," said Li.

          "For those who stayed in the terminals overnight, we prepared water and blankets. The shops and restaurants remained open around the clock," she said.

          Operations at the airport returned to normal on Sunday morning.

          "In the next two days, we will arrange 211 additional flights," said Li, who added that the airport was expected to handle 1,730 flights on Sunday alone.

          "My flight from Chengdu to Beijing was scheduled for 4:25 pm on Saturday. However, after I got my boarding pass, I was told it would be postponed until 6 pm because of the thunderstorm in Beijing," said one passenger, Lu Yuanming. However, the plane still couldn't take off at 6 pm. At 7 pm, more than 200 passengers were taken to hotels close to the airport.

          Lu thought he would be able to catch his plane on Sunday morning. However, he was told that it had been cancelled and that the next available flight would be in the late afternoon. Meanwhile, trains in and out of the capital were also delayed. The Y595 from Beijing to Laiyuan in Hebei province was stranded at the tourist resort of Shidu for more than 10 hours, according to staff at the Railway Administration of Beijing.

          Government

          "Faced with the heaviest rainfall in 61 years, Beijing launched its emergency plan. We have every confidence that we have the ability to tackle the storm and to minimize the effects of the deluge," said Guo Jinlong, mayor of Beijing, quoted on CCTV.

          As a megatropolis, Beijing is a combination of old and new, he said. The storm proved that the city's infrastructure facilities are still weak. "We will continue to update our emergency plans, improve the construction of infrastructure facilities, upgrade our ability to mobilize rescue staff and promote people's safety awareness in the future," he said.

          Meanwhile, the central government has transferred a relief fund of 120 million yuan ($19 million) - mainly to finance flood control work and repair damaged infrastructure - to Beijing, the municipality of Tianjin and Hebei province, the three heaviest-hit areas, which suffered heavy damage during the storm.

          Those measures are likely to be needed as more rains are expected to hit the capital on Wednesday and Thursday.

          Contact the writers at hena@chinadaily.com.cn and caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

          Tan Zongyang and Huang Zhiling contributed to this story.

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