Four Chinese officials have been suspended following devastating
floods that left more than 200 dead and missing and provoked widespread
outrage over an alleged cover-up by the authorities, state media
reported Sunday.
Torrential rains lashed the north this week, driving over 300,000
people from their homes and leaving hundreds of thousands more trapped
as waters rose.
But a flash flood near the town of Xingtai in Hebei province provoked
particular outrage after locals accused officials of failing to warn
them of the impending deluge — and trying to cover up the cause of the
disaster.
The alleged mistake left at least 25 dead and 13 missing, and public
anger over the situation mounted after pictures of the corpses of
drowned children being pulled from the muddy floodwaters circulated
online.
In the aftermath, residents voiced suspicions that the sudden flood,
which struck early Wednesday while villagers slept, was man-made — the
result of a release of water from a local reservoir, rather than the
breaking of a levee in a nearby river, as officials claimed.
Hebei’s Communist Party committee has now announced it has suspended
two Xingtai town officials, as well as a chief engineer from the
provincial capital and a deputy county head, for “dereliction of duty”
the official Xinhua news agency reported.
The four officials will be “subjected to accountability investigations and could face further punishment”, it said.
Xingtai’s mayor also apologised for the town’s response to the disaster.
Earlier in the week, local deputy Communist Party secretary Wang
Qingfei had drawn ire for suggesting there had been “no casualties” in
the flood, the Beijing News said Saturday.
Public scepticism towards officials is common following disasters in
China, as authorities seek to control information and their lack of
openness can raise doubts about their trustworthiness.
Flooding is not uncommon during the summer monsoon season in northern
China, but rains have been unusually heavy across the country this
summer.
Beijing and surrounding areas were expected to receive more heavy rains Sunday night, Xinhua said.
Heavy downpours have already wreaked havoc in central and southern
China, flooding several major cities and causing over 200 deaths, state
media has said.
AFP
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