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Beijing is on high alert as deadly floods continue to plague the city

Beijing warned its residents to prepare for more heavy rains in the mountains of the city, one week after the deadly floods that killed dozens.

Weather forecasters have warned that parts of Beijing could receive up to 200mm (7.9 in) of rain over a period of six hours starting at midday. Weather forecasters warn that Beijing, a city with 22 million residents, receives an average of 600mm of rain each year.

Authorities are rushing to update evacuation plans, improve weather forecasts, and reinforce aging flood defences. They have also reported that bodies were pulled from floodwaters across the country. At least three of them were found at a flooded health camp in Hebei Province.

At least 44 people were killed in Beijing last month after heavy rains. The majority of those who died were trapped by quickly rising water at a nursing facility in Miyun District on the northeastern outskirts of Beijing. Authorities admitted that their emergency plans were inadequate in the wake of these deaths.

Beijing's seven districts with the highest preparedness level for flood prevention were Mentougou (Fangshan), Fengtai (Shijingshan), Huairou (Miyun), and Yanqing on Monday.

Authorities have warned that the risk of landslides and flash floods is "extremely large".

Beijing's worst flooding since living memory killed 79 people in the summer of 2012. Fangshan was the hardest-hit district, with residents reporting that floodwaters rose by 1.3 metres within 10 minutes.

Beijing's topography is described as a "rain trap" by some, with the mountains in the west and north capturing humid air and amplifying rainfall.

WELLNESS RETREAT

China's official news agency Xinhua said that as of Saturday, torrential downpours had swept through the "Beijing Valley", a riverside retreat in Chengde, a city adjacent to Beijing located in Hebei province. Three people were confirmed dead, and four others are still unaccounted for.

Caixin Media reported that around 40 people had gathered for an event on the 27th of July. Organisers directed them to tents set up on low-lying ground next to a river's bend.

The floodwaters were knee-high by 2 am the following morning. Campers had to rush to the only exit.

The site was similar to Camp Mystic, Texas, where last month at least 28 children drowned after Guadalupe River broke its banks during torrential rainfall.

Five bodies were found in China's southern Guangdong Province over the weekend after a massive search operation that involved more than 1,300 rescuers.

Xinhua said on Sunday that the five people who were reported missing on Friday evening had been "swept away" by recent heavy rains. (Reporting and editing by Stephen Coates; Joe Cash and Ryan Woo).

(source: Reuters)