A total of 58 people were killed and 175 others were missing in rainstorm-triggered floods and a major geological disaster last week in southwest China's Sichuan Province, state-run Xinhua news agency quoted local officials as saying.
The province, which was recently devastated by an earthquake, was subjected to heavy rains since last week resulting in heavy floods and landslides in which many houses were buried.
Four persons were killed when a road bridge that formed part of a national expressway in the city of Fuxin, in northeast China's Liaoning Province collapsed under the weight of flood waters.
The Raoyang River witnessed record flooding yesterday with its level touching the highest point since the river's hydrometeorology data was first recorded in 1951.
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In addition to the accident, the city's transport department has found another three bridges on the expressway in danger of collapse as downpours have eroded the structures' foundations.
The department has closed the expressway section to traffic, the report said.
Meanwhile, local officials said that as many as 26 people were killed in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region this month, local officials said.
Also three persons were killed and seven others reported missing in floods triggered by heavy rains in Gansu Province in the last two days.
Heavy rain pounded Huanxian County in the last two days with rainfall reaching up to 42.3 mm within an hour in Fanjiachuan Township, local officials said.
As of today, rain-triggered floods had forced over 200 people in six villages to relocate to tents, and 9,267 hectares of crops had been damaged, a spokesman said.
Road traffic, telecommunications and electricity were disrupted in the township, and power has not yet been fully restored.