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| A bridge submerged in floodwaters in the ancient town of Fenghuang [Credit: AFP/Getty] |
It can attract 30,000 visitors a day and has applied for world heritage status recognition from UNESCO, but pictures showed it inundated, with the central span of a bridge poking up through the waters.
Reports said electricity had been cut off and more than 120,000 tourists and locals had been evacuated from Fenghuang and the surrounding county.
According to China’s official Xinhua news agency, the Tuojiang river in the town had reached 1.1 metres above its previous highest recorded level, and several bridges had been damaged or destroyed.
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| The Tuojiang river has flooded houses [Credit: AFP/Getty] |
More than 40 trains were cancelled, it added, citing the Guangzhou Railway Corporation.
“Torrential downpours have led to Fenghuang old town becoming a water town,” said a posting on a discussion page on the topic set up on Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter.
Central and southern China are regularly hit by powerful storms in the spring and summer months.
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| Flooding in Fenghuang [Credit: Rex] |
In May, three people were killed and thousands evacuated after several days of rainstorms in southern China, flooding major cities and affecting air and rail transport.
An earlier round of rain and hail storms triggered flooding and landslides in the region that killed at least 16 people in March.
Source: AFP [July 16, 2014]








