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Six people killed by heavy rains in China's South, disaster alerts issued

State media reported that heavy rains over the weekend in China's southern Guangdong province and Guangxi affected trains and power supplies, and killed at least six. There were also alerts for geological disasters and severe flooding in certain parts of China.

The National Meteorological Centre of China issued several heavy rain warnings from Sunday through Monday in the Jiangxi region, Zhejiang province, Fujian, Guangxi, Guangdong and Guangxi regions, and the northwestern province Xinjiang.

The yellow alert, which indicates a high-risk of mountain flooding, was issued for parts of Zhejiang and Fujian.

According to Shenzhen Railway authorities, heavy rains on Monday caused the closure of at least 10 railway lines that connect Shenzhen to other cities.

State media reported that more than 620,000 homes in Guangxi had lost electricity in the past few days because of rain. As of Monday, the local power provider had restored electricity to about 600,000.

China uses a four-tiered weather warning system, with the red color representing the most serious warning. This is followed by yellow, orange and blue.

The Chinese meteorological data shows that 2024 is the hottest year since records started over 60 years ago. This is the second consecutive year where milestones have been broken.

The warmer weather last year was accompanied with stronger storms, higher rainfalls and spikes in China's power consumption.

CCTV, the state broadcaster, said that heavy rains were also expected in the Tianshan mountains and the far west region of Xinjiang from Monday through Tuesday. Reporting by Farah master and the Beijing Newsroom; editing by Sonali and Mark Heinrich

(source: Reuters)