
Local people row boats in flooded Daoshui Town of Wuzhou City,
southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, June 16, 2008. As of Monday
evening, flood has affected 92 counties, cities and regions in Guangxi. Some
7.54 million people were plagued by the flood with direct economic loss standing
at about 4.6 billion RMB yuan (660 million U.S. dollars).
GUANGZHOU, June 16 (Xinhua) -- South China's Guangdong Province was facing
the threat of serious flooding as two swollen rivers converged in the Pearl
River Delta on Monday, resulting in a flood equivalent to a worst in 50 years.
The runoff in Xijiang River was 46,800 cubic meters per second and in
Beijiang River 15,200 cubic meters per second before they met each other in
Foshan City, according to the Guangdong provincial headquarters of flood control
and drought relief, which said this was far higher than normal.
The danger of serious flooding is made worse by the pull from the moon,
which is rising to its most powerful point in the month on Wednesday, posing a
threat for river embankments across the delta, experts said.
More rains were forecast in the upstream areas of Xijiang and Beijiang
Rivers in next two days.
The Guangdong provincial flood control headquarters on Monday ordered local
governments to reinforce river embankments in nine cities, including Guangzhou
and to prepare to evacuate people in danger.

Two buffaloes swim in the Pearl River in Sanshui City, south
China's Guangdong Province, June 16, 2008. The first flood peak of the Pearl
River passed the Makou hydrometric station in Sanshui on Monday. The water level
at the station reached 8.26 meters, 0.76 meters higher than the alert level.
The Pearl River Delta is a major manufacturing base of the country, while
Guangdong posted a gross domestic product (GDP) of more than 2.59 trillion yuan
(375 billion U.S. dollars) in 2006, ranking the first on the Chinese mainland.
Recent rainstorms and floods have affected 5.76 million people in 17 cities
in Guangdong, including 20 deaths and eight missing persons.
Continuous downpours had cut seven national highways and 68 provincial ones
in Guangdong, causing an economic loss of 600 million yuan. Seven provincial
highways remained paralyzed on Monday while the others have been repaired.
At least 57 people have been killed and 1.27 million people relocated as
rainstorms and floods ravaged nine provinces and region in south China and
affected 17.87 million people, authorities said on Sunday.

Photo taken on June 16, 2008 shows the cracks on the side slope
of State Highway No. 321 in Congjiang County, southwest China's Guizhou
Province. Immediate survey and preliminary proposal were carried out by the
highway administration bureau of Kaili City and local government as soon as
cracks were discovered on the side slope after recent heavy rainfall.
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region bordering Guangdong on Monday also ordered
two cities along the Xijiang River to reinforce embankments as heavy rains
continued.
More than 70,000 people were relocated on Monday in Guangxi, bringing the
total number of relocated people to 916,000. More than 7.5 million people have
been affected as of 6 p.m. Monday, the regional civil affairs department said.
Storms hit 12 towns in southern parts of Guizhou Province on Sunday and
Monday, leaving more than 400 houses inundated and crops damaged.
Hunan Province to the north of Guangdong on Monday claimed victory in
fighting the first flood in the province this year with the flood crest passing
the provincial capital of Changsha safely, despite two monitoring stations
recorded highest water level in the history.
One people died and another was missing in Hunan's flood, which also
toppled down houses and cut off roads.

Local people stand at a flood-destroyed road at Longhua Village in
the Changzhou District of Wuzhou, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, June 16, 2008. As of Monday evening, flood has affected 92 counties,
cities and regions in Guangxi. Some 7.54 million people were plagued by the
flood with direct economic loss standing at about 4.6 billion RMB yuan (660
million U.S. dollars).

Local people row a boat passing flooded fields in Changzhou Town in
the Changzhou District of Wuzhou, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, June 16, 2008. As of Monday evening, flood has affected 92 counties,
cities and regions in Guangxi. Some 7.54 million people were plagued by the
flood with direct economic loss standing at about 4.6 billion RMB yuan (660
million U.S. dollars).

Local people row a boat passing flooded fields in Changzhou Town in
the Changzhou District of Wuzhou, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, June 16, 2008. As of Monday evening, flood has affected 92 counties,
cities and regions in Guangxi. Some 7.54 million people were plagued by the
flood with direct economic loss standing at about 4.6 billion RMB yuan (660
million U.S. dollars).

Two boys play in the Pearl River in Sanshui City, south China's
Guangdong Province, June 16, 2008. The first flood peak of the Pearl River
passed the Makou hydrometric station in Sanshui on Monday. The water level at
the station reached 8.26 meters, 0.76 meters higher than the alert level.

A man rows his small boat on the Ganjiang River in Nanchang,
capital of east China's Jiangxi Province, June 16, 2008. Continual rainstorms
and ensuing floods have ravaged Jiangxi since June 8, affecting 3.87 million
people.