Digger trucks drafted in to rescue people stranded in China floods

The death toll in Zhengzhou from the flooding currently stands at 51

In Mihe, China, the downpour has dumped piles of fresh mud on the town, in a flat-bottomed valley with steep slopes of red dirt. Photograph: Keith Bradsher/The New York Times
In Mihe, China, the downpour has dumped piles of fresh mud on the town, in a flat-bottomed valley with steep slopes of red dirt. Photograph: Keith Bradsher/The New York Times

Workers driving construction vehicles helped to rescue stranded residents and deliver food to those still trapped on Friday after days of torrential rain swamped the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou.

As floodwaters began to recede, rescuers in the city of 12 million used digger trucks, inflatable boats and makeshift rafts to transport some residents to dry land and deliver provisions to others in high-rise apartment blocks.

Zhengzhou, the capital city of populous Henan province, has borne the brunt of extreme wet weather in central China this week, receiving the equivalent of a year's worth of rain in just a few days.

The resulting severe flooding killed 12 people who were trapped in the city’s subway system. It also downed power supplies and stranded residents at home, in offices and on public transportation.

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Some of the rescuers are volunteers using makeshift means like the digger trucks deployed by local construction companies.

One of the volunteers, Li Kui, 34, said the demand for basic goods and foods was immense.

“We start our day at 8am and go on until 2am Besides having lunch and using the bathroom, we just go up and down the streets all day,” Mr Li said.

Asked if he was exhausted, Mr Li said: “Yes, but compared to the people trapped inside, they must be feeling worse.”

In other areas of the city where the floodwaters had subsided, municipal workers started the clean-up, sweeping away tree branches and clearing up other debris like marooned bicycles and scooters.

Tens of thousands of rescue workers, including the military, have been deployed across Henan more broadly. The death toll in Zhengzhou from the flooding currently stands at 51, according to a report from local media Zhengzhou News Broadcast posted on Weibo, citing preliminary statistics.

Eight people remained missing as patchy mobile phone signal and power blackouts in some areas hindered official tallying.

Rescue professionals from neighbouring provinces have been called in, along with specialised vehicles to drain waterlogged streets, intersections and underground road tunnels.

While the rains in Zhengzhou had eased to a light drizzle, other parts of Henan were still forecast to receive heavy rain on Friday, according to weather reports.

In Xinxiang, a city north of Zhengzhou, 29 of 30 reservoirs were overflowing, a situation the local water conservancy bureau described as “grim”.

Family rescues

For rescuers, the task was sometimes upsetting. Local media reported that a three-to-four-old infant was pulled from a collapsed home just outside Zhengzhou earlier this week, with the body of the child’s mother found a day later.

Zhou Xiaozhong (33), a digger truck driver from nearby Kaifeng city, picked up a mother and her two young children.

“She was crying,” said Mr Zhou, a father of three. “I too felt like crying.”

The devastation and loss of life has sparked public criticism of the slow reaction of Zhengzhou’s subway operator, prompting the Chinese government to order local authorities to immediately improve urban transit flood controls and emergency responses.

The provincial weather bureau also came under fire for a lack of warning, despite saying said it had issued a forecast two days before the rains arrived.

A document created by an anonymous user on a Google Docs-like platform owned by tech giant Tencent for people to share real-time information on the flooding in Henan had been accessed more than 6 million times by Friday. –Reuters