Beijing says it's been truthful on flooding deaths

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Beijing says it's been truthful on flooding deaths

3News NZ

Rescuers row a boat carrying residents to a safer area along a flooded street in Yongchuan district, Chongqing (Reuters)

Rescuers row a boat carrying residents to a safer area along a flooded street in Yongchuan district, Chongqing (Reuters)

By Gillian Wong

The Beijing city government says it has been and will continue to be truthful in its reporting of the death toll from the weekend's heavy flooding amid online scepticism.

Spokeswoman Wang Hui told reporters Tuesday that 37 people died in the city because of the torrential rains Saturday. She said flood-hit areas were still being inspected and any updates will be disclosed promptly.

"I want to say I hope everyone will not speculate that the Beijing government is hiding the death toll," said Wang, who at moments during the briefing became teary-eyed as she described the force of the downpour in the worst-hit areas.

"Doing the inspection work is not easy. Do believe us that we will speak the truth," she said. "If there are new figures we will immediately tell you."

The vow of transparency comes as some Chinese microblog users voiced doubts about the official death toll and circulated rumours about higher casualties.

The official Xinhua News Agency cited the Civil Affairs Ministry as counting 111 storm deaths around the country as of Tuesday afternoon.

Authorities were still trying to pump water from sections of flooded highway after Beijing's heaviest rain in six decades.

Although the worst-hit areas were in rural hilly outskirts of the city, the scale of the disaster was a major embarrassment for Beijing, the showcase capital where such things are not supposed to happen.

Billions of dollars have been poured into the city's modernization, including venues for the 2008 Olympics, the world's second-largest airport, new subway lines and dazzling skyscrapers, while basics like water drainage were apparently neglected.

The criticism mirrors some of that seen after a high-speed train crash in southeastern China a year ago Monday. That turned into a public-relations nightmare for the government and led many to question the quality of infrastructure in the country and the government's transparency on disasters.

AP

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Comments

30/07/2012 10:45:06 a.m.

Mike wrote:

Compare the response to the quake in the 80's that the world never heard about from China, and it only killed over 200,000 people.

China is changing. Chinese public works are also bringing China forward to the 21st century. No country in the world is spending as much on infrastructure as China, and it is this spending on infrastructure which has fueled China growth.

Take India, also a huge population and yet it lacks the infrastructure to deliver as much as China. Before China had amoung the worst infrastructure in the world, so it had the most to improve.

Heaviest rain in 60 years. It would be like pointing the finger at the UK for shutting down London Airport for having its first snow in 20 years and having no snowploughs handy to keep the airport open. China has made changes to infrastructure that reduce flooding, no doubt they will learn from this to improve them further. Yes there was flooding, but maybe the question should be how little there was? Compare the lack of flooding compared to that 60 years ago with much more population and one can see the media bias because it is China. Take the wet weather in New Orlens in the US, they had a natural disaster flooding there to. Weather plays no favorites.