Floods kill 21, cause over $19mn in
damage in northern Vietnam
Houses and farms have been destroyed by disaster in
the past days
Residents struggle to travel around due to mudslides in the
northern Vietnamese province of Lai Chau on June 26, 2018. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Twenty-one people have been confirmed dead by floods in the mountainous northern provinces of Lai Chau and Ha Giang as of Wednesday afternoon, while financial damage caused by the disasters has been estimated at a whopping VND450 billion (US$19.8 million).
Among the
deceased victims, 16 were in Lai Chau Province and the other five lived in Ha
Giang.
About nine
victims have remained unaccounted for in Lai Chau since torrential rain hit
the region on Saturday night, bringing about flash floods and landslides.
As of
Tuesday night, about 124 houses have collapsed and been swept away by floods,
while 597 others were seriously damaged, requiring prompt evacuation.
Nearly 1,500
homes are still submerged under water.
Some 717
hectares of paddy filed and 486 hectares of crops were inundated, and
approximately 46 hectares of aquaculture farms were also damaged.
More than
195 cattle and 5,900 poultry were killed.
Financial
damage in the two provinces has been estimated at a total of VND450 billion
($19.8 million), according to Lai Chau and Ha Giang’s steering committees for
disaster prevention.
Multiple
national and provincial highway sections are still blocked by mudslides.
Deputy Prime
Minister Trinh Dinh Dung paid a visit to Tam Duong District, Lai Chau
Province on Tuesday morning to directly evaluate the situation.
Dung called
on local authorities to continue their efforts to deal with the consequences
and prioritize the search for missing victims.
Residents in dangerous areas must be
evacuated in a prompt manner, he added.
The National
Center for Hydro-meteorological Forecasting has predicted that downpours will
linger until the end of Wednesday, before a heat wave starts affecting
northern and central Vietnam on Thursday, causing temperature to surge.
Professor
Nguyen Ngoc Lung, head of the Research Institute for Sustainable Forest
Management and Forest Certification (SFMI), attributed the severity of floods
in Lai Chau and Ha Giang to the loss of natural forests.
Many
provinces in mountainous areas of northern Vietnam previously cleared natural
forest to make way for rubber tree plantation, which worsened the situation,
Lung elaborated.
Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 6, 2018
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