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CHONGQING, July 19 (Xinhua) -- Rain-triggered landslides in southwest China Monday blocked a river, creating a barrier lake in Chongqing Municipality and forcing the evacuation of more than 12,000 people, flood control authorities said.The landslide blocked the Luojiang River in Chengkou County early Monday, creating a dam holding 15 to 20 million cubic meters of water, said Xing Hua, a Chengkou Water Resources Bureau spokesman.As of 5 a.m. Monday, the barrier lake was five-square-kilometers in area and 18-meters deep, said Xing.Photo taken on July 19, 2010 shows the Ciqikou Town surrounded by flood water of the Jialingjiang River, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality. The water level of Beibei section of Jianglingjiang River rose to 197.76 meters, 3.26 meters higher than the alarm line.All 12,000 residents - 7,000 from Chongqing and 5,000 from neighboring Sichuan Province - have been evacuated to higher ground, flood control authorities in the two regions said.The rising waters may flood the upper reaches of the river while any potential dam breach would bring fatal floods downstream.Continuous downpours and poor road conditions have hindered work teams and experts getting near the site, stymying efforts to deal with the barrier lake, said Chengkou County's flood control office.
BEIJING, June 7 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in several south China provinces issued flood alerts on Monday after a new round of storms is expected to pound the region that still reels from recent floodings.The national weather forecast says much of southern China, including provinces such as Guangdong, Guizhou, Jiangxi and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region are to experience storms in coming days.Many of the areas were drenched in last month's wide-scale heavy rains.A resident rows a raft in Chengjiang Town of Yao Autonomous County of Du'an, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, June 7, 2010. Flood still remains in some parts of Du'an on June 7, seven days after heavy rainstorms killed 38 people.In the worst-hit Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the government on Monday said death toll from recent landslides and flooding has climbed to 53.Forty-two counties in nine Guangxi cities were affected. In Chengxiang village, people were forced to row make-shift boats -- made of plastic bottles and planks -- to commute through the flooded streets.Chen Jian, the region's chief weather forecaster, said heavy rains are expected to fall on six Guangxi cities from June 7 to 10.Local disaster relief officials were ordered to evacuate residents in low-lying areas in advance. Safety measures at reservoirs shall also be reviewed, officials said.In Jiangxi Province, where mudslides recently derailed a train and flooding forced the evacuation of 90,000 residents, government departments and agencies were ordered to ramp up flood prevention measures.Schools, coal mines, markets and other populated areas will be carefully monitored to prevent accidents that could lead to massive casualties, according to officials.The alert noted that water levels in Jiangxi's reservoirs and waterways remain high, posing serious threats to the government's flood prevention work.Alarms also rang in central Hubei Province. The provincial meteorological bureau forecast heavy storms to hit Hubei from June 7 to 8 and might trigger flooding in its southern mountainous areas.By June 3, floods have killed 125 people and left 34 people missing all over China, the Office of State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters said.More than 23.09 million people and 1.55 million hectares of crops were affected. Direct economic losses amounted to 16.9 billion yuan (2.47 billion U.S. dollars), it said.
BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- Chinese telecom equipment giant Huawei Technologies said Motorola's charges of stealing confidential information about its cellular network equipment is groundless, the China Daily reported Saturday.Motorola on Wednesday said one of its former staff engineers, who now works with a Huawei reseller called Lemko, had provided information about a new transceiver and other Motorola technology to Ren Zhengfei, the founder of Huawei Technologies, the newspaper said."The complaint is groundless and utterly without merit. Huawei has no relationship with Lemoko, other than a reseller agreement," Huawei wrote in an e-mail to the newspaper, adding that it will defend themselves against these baseless allegations.The Chinese telecom equipment company had been planning to tap into the United States market via acquisitions.It is believed Huawei is interested in deals including a 1.2-billion-U.S. dollar Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) purchase of the wireless network assets from Motorola, and Ericssons's 1.13-billion-U.S. dollar takeover of Nortel Networks' mobile unit, according to the newspaper.Wang Yuquan, senior consultant with research firm Frost&Sullivan China, told the newspaper that though Huawei has not been successful in its efforts in the U.S. market so far, it may gain some of the customers impacted by the NSN takeover.
BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- Urban residents who expect home prices to fall in first-tier Chinese cities in the second quarter outnumber those who anticipate further price hikes, according to a report by the China Economic Monitoring and Analysis Center released here Thursday.About 41 percent of those surveyed in the second quarter expected house prices to fall in popular first-tier cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen -- 18 percentage points higher than the proportion in the first quarter, according to the center which is under the National Bureau of Statistics.Meanwhile, only 36 percent of those surveyed in the second quarter anticipated house prices to continue to rise in those first-tier cities -- 24 basis points lower than the first quarter.In the second quarter, more people are expecting house prices to decline in cities at various levels, even as the proportions vary in different cities, according to the report.About 30 percent of consumers in provincial capital cities anticipated home prices to weaken in the second quarter, compared with 15 percent in the first quarter.In other small- and medium-sized cities, 28 percent of consumers surveyed foresaw house price falling in the future, up more than 11 basis points from the first quarter."The result show government measures to tighten the housing market since mid April have begun to have an effect on urban consumers' expectations," said Pan Jiancheng, deputy director of the China Economic Monitoring and Analysis Center.In spite of the rising proportions, the number of those who anticipated house price declines, however, still fell short of those who expected further price hikes in cities, except for consumers in the first-tier cities, according to the report.Housing prices in major Chinese cities rose 10.3 percent year on year in July, compared with 11.4 percent growth in June, according to NBS data released Tuesday.Property prices in 70 large and medium-sized cities grew 12.4 percent in May and 12.8 percent in April, the highest growth rate since July 2005 when the government started publishing the data.
URUMQI, Aug. 7 (Xinhua) -- A group of 192 Chinese workers and engineers, who had been trapped and later rescued in flood- hit Pakistan's northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, returned home at 8:24 p.m.Saturday on a charter flight.The plane took them to Urumqi, northwest China' s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and after a brief stay, they will fly to their home towns in central China's Henan Province, east China's Shandong Province and southwest China's Sichuan Province."I feel safe coming back home," Feng Yong, an engineer said at the Urumqi airport.Chinese workers and engineers walk out of a chartered plane at the airport in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Aug. 7, 2010. The first batch of 192 Chinese workers and engineers, who had once been trapped and rescued in flood-hit Pakistan's northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, returned to China Saturday. A total of 268 Chinese workers and engineers working at a hydro-power station project in the Patan area of Kohistan District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were trapped on a mountain as a huge landslide, triggered by floods and torrential rains, washed across their work site on July 29.All 265 people were safely evacuated, except for three workers who went missing.Fourteen Chinese engineers are still taking care of the flood-ravaged project site while the remaining 59 workers are waiting for other arrangements in Islamabad.