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Four dead in China flash flood; 11 died in Gambia's worst floods in decades by AFP Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Aug 13, 2022 Four people were killed and nine others injured in a flash flood in southwest China on Saturday, local authorities said. Footage published by Chinese media showed water rising rapidly in a river on the outskirts of Sichuan province's Pengzhou city. Tourists who had been playing in the initially shallow water could be seen running for safety and clambering over rocks as the water rushed towards them, but some were unable to reach the river bank in time. At least one person, a woman stranded on a boulder in the middle of the river, appeared to lose her footing and was swept away by the current, according to a video posted online by the state-owned Beijing Youth Daily. "As of 7.30 pm, the mountain flood has killed four people, severely injured three and lightly injured six others," Pengzhou emergency response authorities said in a statement. The flood comes during a summer of extreme weather in China, with multiple cities including Shanghai recording their hottest days ever during a heatwave in July. Scientists say extreme weather across the world has become more frequent due to climate change, and will likely grow more intense as global temperatures rise. China's national observatory has issued a red alert for high temperatures as the mercury is expected to soar past 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) across swathes of the country this weekend, state news agency Xinhua reported on Saturday. Severe flooding in southern China in June displaced more than half a million people and caused an estimated $250 million in economic damage.
Eleven died in Gambia's worst floods in 50 years Flash floods following heavy rainfall on July 30 and 31 "directly affected" at least 40,000 people, including more than 8,000 children under the age of five, but are likely to have had an impact on hundreds of thousands in total, the National Disaster Management Agency (NDMA) said on Thursday. The Department of Water Resources recorded 276 millimetres of rainfall in the capital Banjul over the two-day period, it said. "The suburbs in urban settlements have been the hardest hit", the agency said, with 11 deaths reported and 5,407 people internally displaced. "Hundreds of houses have been completely or partially damaged and unsafe for human habitation." Most of the internally displaced -- 52.4 percent of whom are women and girls -- are staying with relatives. The NDMA and Red Cross are housing 350 people at a temporary camp in Banjul. "The historical records of floods date as far back as 1948", the report said, noting that the country's most significant floods were recorded in 1988, 1999, 2002, 2010, 2020 and 2022. "This shows that the frequency of flash floods and climate related shocks are becoming more persistent", it added. In the Greater Banjul Area, hundreds of water points and thousands of sanitation facilities were affected by the latest flooding, with water throughout the city appearing "yellowish green with a pungent smell", the agency said. In Tobacco Road neighbourhood, the sewage system overflowed and mixed with the flood waters. "Numerous" cases of diarrhoea and skin rashes had been reported there, the agency said, adding there was a "very high" risk of water-borne diseases. It also said the stagnant waters had attracted attract reptiles in some communities, "posing a risk to the population". On a visit to affected areas of Banjul last week, President Adama Barrow pledged $46 million for a new water canal project, which he said would be built by the end of the year, media reported.
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