In the summer of 2012, 79 people died in Beijing in the city’s deadliest flooding in living memory. Fangshan district was the worst-hit, with one resident reporting a rise in floodwaters of 1.3m in just 10 minutes.
Beijing’s topography has been described by some as a rain “trap”, with its mountains to the west and north capturing moist air and amplifying any ensuing rainfall as a result.
WELLNESS RETREAT
As of Saturday, torrential rains that swept through “Beijing Valley”, a riverside wellness retreat in the Hebei city of Chengde adjacent to Beijing, had claimed three lives, with four still missing, China’s state news agency Xinhua reported.
Around 40 people had gathered on Jul 27 for an event at the site, where organisers directed them into tents pitched on low-lying land next to a river bend, Caixin Media reported.
By 2am the next morning, floodwaters had risen to knee height, forcing attendees to scramble towards the camp’s only exit.
The site bore similarities to Camp Mystic in Texas, where at least 28 children were swept to their deaths last month by floodwaters after the Guadalupe River burst its banks amid torrential rain.
In China’s southern Guangdong province over the weekend, the bodies of five people were recovered after a large-scale search operation involving more than 1,300 rescuers.
The five people, who went missing on Friday night, were “swept away by water” following heavy rainfall in recent days, Xinhua reported on Sunday.
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