Torrential rains ravaged central and southern China, nearly two weeks after leaving at least killing 105 people and 65 missing, the state news agency Xinhua reported on Wednesday.
A rescuer transfer an elderly woman and her granddaughter with an excavator on a flooded street in Xianning, Hubei province June 15, 2011. Torrential rains are still ravaging central and southern China, nearly two weeks after leaving at least 105 people dead and 65 missing, the state news agency Xinhua reported on Wednesday.
Reuters
A woman shovels mud at her house after a landslide triggered by heavy rainfalls in Linxiang, Hunan province June 11, 2011. Torrential rain in two drought-stricken central China provinces triggered landslides and brought down houses, killing at least 44 people and leaving 33 missing, state media said on Friday.
Reuters
Residents walk along a flooded street in Kaihua county, Zhejiang province June 15, 2011. Torrential rains are still ravaging central and southern China, nearly two weeks after leaving at least 105 people dead and 65 missing, the state news agency Xinhua reported on Wednesday. Picture taken June 15, 2011
Reuters
Residents row their rubber dinghy past a flooded street in Xianning, Hubei province, June 15, 2011. Torrential rains are still ravaging central and southern China, nearly two weeks after leaving at least 105 people dead and 65 missing, the state news agency Xinhua reported on Wednesday.
Reuters