YANCHENG: People scrabbled through the rubble of their homes Friday after hurricane-force winds and a tornado left at least 98 dead in China, with hundreds more injured.
Whole villages were levelled and huge trees felled when winds of up to 125 km per hour struck around Yancheng city in the eastern province of Jiangsu on Thursday, the official Xinhua news agency said.
In Shizhuang, scores gathered beside a large fishing pond where a male corpse floated in the water, as workers cleared up fallen electricity poles nearby.
A distraught woman who thought he was her missing husband was held up by relatives, as another bystander asked: “How come no one is pulling him up yet?”
So far 98 people have been confirmed dead in the storm and 846 have been hospitalized with injuries, Yancheng’s deputy mayor Wu Xiaodan told a press briefing, according to the city’s verified microblog.
President Xi Jinping ordered “all-out rescue efforts” after what Xinhua said was one of the worst disasters ever to hit Jiangsu, including the worst tornado to hit China in half a century.
In Funing County, one of the hardest-hit areas, residents shifted through the fallen bricks and pillars of their destroyed homes, many with their roofs torn off, and rubble spilled into a river.
Wu, the official, said that 28,104 houses in the county had been affected.
Funing resident Sun Yazhou was driving a concrete mixer truck when a tornado passed him, tearing the glass out of his vehicle windows.
“The sky was completely dark. I was scared, but I had nowhere to run. I had to wait it out,” he told AFP.
Zhou Xiang, head of the provincial fire corps, said the search for survivors in the debris had been completed, according to Xinhua, and the clean-up was now underway.
More than 1,300 police officers had been mobilized to help, the agency added.
The wards of a hospital in Funing county were all full, with extra beds crowding the hallways.
Sitting on a gurney in the hospital corridor, Chen Shaoxi nursed a head injury and broken leg that he sustained while saving his elderly neighbors from the storm.
“If it weren’t for my dad, those two would have been dead,” his son Wang Minming said.
A factory worker with head and arm injuries and on an intravenous drip told AFP he had been swept out of his workplace by the tornado, despite clinging to a door as he tried to hold it shut against the storm.
“It all happened so fast. I have never seen anything like this before in my life,” he said.
“I thought for sure I was going to die,” he added. “I can’t believe I am still alive.”
The Canadian Solar factory, which employed around 1,000 workers, and its dormitory were destroyed.
“I have nothing now. My money, my things, all gone. It was so scary,” he said.
Workers and People’s Liberation Army soldiers were removing fallen high voltage electricity poles around the factory, where buildings had been stripped of their roofs by the storm and their windows blown out.
Reports said more than 360 rescuers were deployed at the factory, where two employees of the firm, which is based in West Guelph, Ontario, were missing.
Flooding is common during the summer monsoon season in the south of China, but rainfall has been particularly heavy this year.
Many parts of China have been lashed by torrential rains this week as summer rainstorms have been heavier than usual, causing damage across the country.
Ten people were killed in Beicheng village near the factory, the youngest only nine years old.
Villager Tang Yuxing told AFP that his neighbor, a cook in her forties, was walking home from work at the factory but got caught up in the tornado, which flung her up into the air and killed her on impact.
Her husband works abroad in Singapore, and her son had just left home for college in the provincial capital of Nanjing.
“It’s just her alone now, lying in the morgue all by herself,” he said. “All it took was a crazy wind, and a life was lost.”
China mounts rescue efforts as tornado toll hits 98
China mounts rescue efforts as tornado toll hits 98
Sri Lanka hospital releases 22 rescued Iranian sailors
- Sri Lankan authorities said the survivors from the Dena were being handled according to international humanitarian law
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka discharged from hospital 22 Iranian sailors who were plucked from life rafts after their warship was sunk by a US submarine, officials said Sunday.
The sailors were treated at Karapitiya Hospital in the southern port city of Galle since Wednesday after the IRIS Dena was torpedoed just outside Sri Lanka’s territorial waters.
“Another 10 are still undergoing treatment,” a medical officer at the hospital told AFP.
He said the bodies of 84 Iranians retrieved from the Indian Ocean were also at the hospital.
Those discharged from hospital overnight had been taken to a beach resort in the same district.
Sri Lankan authorities said the survivors from the Dena were being handled according to international humanitarian law, and the government had contacted the International Committee of the Red Cross for assistance.
The island is also providing safe haven for another 219 Iranian sailors from a second ship, the IRIS Bushehr, that was allowed to berth a day after the Dena was sunk.
Sailors from the Bushehr have been moved to a Sri Lanka Navy camp at Welisara, just north of the capital Colombo, and their ship taken over by Sri Lanka’s navy.
Sri Lanka announced it was taking the Bushehr to the north-eastern port of Trincomalee, but an engine failure and other technical and administrative issues had delayed the movement, a navy spokesman said.
Sri Lanka has denied claims that it was under pressure from Washington not to allow the Iranians to return home, and said Colombo will be guided solely by international law and its own domestic legislation.
A US State Department spokesperson said the disposition of the Bushehr crew and Iranian sailors rescued at sea was up to Sri Lanka.
“The United States, of course, respects and recognizes Sri Lanka’s sovereignty in the handling of this situation,” the spokesperson told AFP in Washington.
India, meanwhile, said Saturday that it had allowed a third Iranian warship, the IRIS Lavan, to dock in one of its ports on “humane” grounds after it too reported engine problems.
The three ships were part of a multi-national fleet review held by India before the war in the Middle East started last week.
“I think it was the humane thing to do, and I think we were guided by that principle,” Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said on Saturday.
The Lavan docked in the south-west Indian port of Kochi on Wednesday.
“A lot of the people on board were young cadets. They have disembarked and are in a nearby facility,” Jaishankar said.









