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Authorities report at least 60 deaths in North China due to extreme rain.

In the last week, extreme weather conditions in northern China have killed at least sixty people. Thirty of those deaths occurred in an elderly home in Beijing's Miyun district on the hills in the capital.

At a press briefing, Xia Limao, the deputy mayor of Beijing said that 44 people had been killed in Beijing and nine others were still missing at midday on Thursday.

Miyun experienced rainfall up to 573.5mm (22.6") - levels that local media described in the past as "extremely damaging." Beijing receives an average of 600 mm per year.

Authorities reported that 16 people were killed in the nearby province Hebei as a result intense rain.

Eight people have been killed and 18 are still missing in Chengde, a city just outside Beijing.

State-run Xinhua late Wednesday reported citing local officials that the deaths took place in villages in the Xinglong region of Chengde, Hebei Province, without specifying how or when the people died.

The Chengde deaths occurred in villages bordering Beijing's Miyun, about 25 km (16miles) from Miyun reservoir (the largest reservoir in China's northern region).

During the recent rains that devastated nearby towns, the reservoir's overall water level and capacity reached record highs.

On Sunday, the reservoir reached its maximum capacity when 6,550 cubic meters of water (about 2.5 Olympic-sized swimming pools) flooded in every second.

A landslide killed eight people in another Hebei village, north of the reservoir. Four others are still missing.

Chinese officials attribute a part of the slowdown in manufacturing activity to extreme rainfall and severe floods, which are linked to climate change by meteorologists. Reporting by Liz Lee and Xiuhao chen; Editing and revision by Stephen Coates, Bernadette Baum

(source: Reuters)