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China Gives $100 Million in Emergency Aid to Fight Floods

Torrential rain has lashed large parts of China, with floods damaging crops, forcing many thousands to flee their homes and killing at least 33 people.
Reuters
Jul 04 2017
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Torrential rain has lashed large parts of China, with floods damaging crops, forcing many thousands to flee their homes and killing at least 33 people.
Rescuers transfer residents with a boat at a flooded area in Guilin, Guangxi province, China July 2, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Stringer
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Rescuers transfer residents with a boat at a flooded area in Guilin, Guangxi province, China July 2, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Stringer

Beijing: The Chinese government has disbursed 700 million yuan ($103 million) in emergency aid to four provinces in the south and east to help them deal with widespread flooding, the ministry of civil affairs said on Tuesday.

Torrential rain has lashed large parts of the country over the past few days, with floods damaging crops, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes and killing at least 33 people.

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The ministry said the aid would be sent to Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Hunan and Guizhou provinces, to be spent on helping those who have lost their homes or family members in the floods.

The government has already sent 3,300 tents, 30,000 quilts and 24,000 camp beds to help displaced people in the four provinces, the ministry added.

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Floods kill dozens of people every year in China during the summer rainy season.

(Reuters)

This article went live on July fourth, two thousand seventeen, at thirteen minutes past twelve at noon.

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