At least six people have died after floods overwhelmed China’s Guizhou province.
The flooding has spread to other southwestern parts of the country, submerging towns and villages, ahead of a tropical depression.
Parts of neighbouring Guangxi province are half-submerged, with the township of Meilin worst hit, state media reported on Thursday. Floodwaters peaked at more than 4 metres (13ft) above what was considered safe.
Rongjiang and Congjiang in Guizhou province have already seen flooding, but now the wider region is on alert for potential road collapses, landslides and hydro-dam overflows.
On Tuesday, at least six people died when Rongjiang – a city of around 300,000 residents where three rivers meet – was hit by a flood on a scale that Chinese meteorologists said could only happen once in 50 years.
At one point, the flow rate in the River Liu was more than 80 times the average.
Displaced residents were forced to stay at local hotels, which were also hosting rescue personnel and reconstruction workers, according to Reuters.
As deluge-hit areas began to remove silt left behind by the flooding and restore power, water and phone…


