China floods, landslides kill 87
Heavy rain in China has killed at least 87 people and forced thousands from their homes, state media reported yesterday.
The flash floods and landslides in Hebei and Henan provinces destroyed thousands of homes and caused widespread damage to crops.
As many as 16 million people across China have been forced from their homes, Reuters news agency reported.
The Chinese authorities have said they will provide funds for flood-hit areas.
Many of the most recent deaths were in the northern Hebei province, where nearly 50,000 homes collapsed and more than eight million people were affected, said the Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
There were also power cuts and major problems with the communications and transport networks, Xinhua said.
In the central province of Henan, 15 people died in thunderstorms and high winds. About 18,000 houses were damaged and 7.2 million people were forced to leave their homes, Reuters said.
Angry residents have blamed local officials for failing to warn them of the severe weather in advance.
Residents have also voiced suspicions that the sudden flood, which struck early Wednesday while villagers slept, was man-made -- the result of a release of water from a local reservoir, rather than the breaking of a levee in a nearby river, as officials have claimed.
Photos and videos of the aftermath showed the small, floating corpses of drowned children being pulled from the muddy floodwaters, as well as telephone poles toppled and homes completely collapsed.
The summer rains have been especially heavy in China this year and the government has said more than 200 people have been killed as a result of the weather.
It has estimated that more than 1.5 million hectares of crops have been damaged and said direct economic losses exceed $3bn (£2.3bn).
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