Caught On Cam: Lightning Strikes A Tower In China's Guangzhou City Six Times
Caught On Cam: Lightning Strikes A Tower In China's Guangzhou City Six Times
China's southern floods prompt massive evacuations as torrential rains wreak havoc. Shenzhen issues red alert amid fears of flash floods and landslides

Guangzhou City in China’s Guangdong Province witnessed a remarkable event on April 20 as lightning struck the metropolis’ famous Canton Tower six times. State media said the tower’s innovative lightning protection system actively redirects lightning underground, ensuring the safety of people and structures.

Over 100,000 people have been evacuated due to heavy rain and fatal floods in southern China, with the government issuing its highest-level rainstorm warning for the affected area on Tuesday. Torrential rains have lashed Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only “seen around once a century”.

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On Tuesday, the megacity of Shenzhen was among the areas experiencing “heavy to very heavy downpours”, the city’s meteorological observatory said, adding the risk of flash floods was “very high”. It later downgraded its weather warning as the storms weakened, but urged residents to remain vigilant against disasters.

Official media reported Sunday that more than 45,000 people had been evacuated from Qingyuan, which straddles the Bei River tributary. State news agency Xinhua said 110,000 residents across Guangdong had been relocated since the downpours started over the weekend. The floods have claimed the lives of four people so far and 10 are missing, according to state media.

In Foshan, a city in the centre of the province, a further four people were missing after a ship struck a bridge in an incident that “may have been… due to the influence of flooding”, Xinhua reported Tuesday, citing local authorities. The vessel, which was carrying nearly 5,000 tonnes of rolled steel, smacked into a pillar of the Jiujiang Bridge on Monday evening, catapulting several of its 11 crew members into the water.

This aerial photograph taken on April 22, 2024 shows a flooded area after heavy rains in Qingyuan, in southern China’s Guangdong province. (AFP)Climate change driven by human-emitted greenhouse gases makes extreme weather events more frequent and intense, and China is the world’s biggest emitter. Parts of Guangdong have not seen such severe flooding so early in the year since records began in 1954, the state-run China National Radio reported.

Guangdong is China’s manufacturing heartland, home to around 127 million people. “Please quickly take precautions and stay away from dangerous areas such as low-lying areas prone to flooding,” authorities in Shenzhen said in issuing Tuesday’s red alert. “Pay attention to heavy rains and resulting disasters such as waterlogging, flash floods, landslides, mudslides, and ground caving in.”

(With agency inputs)

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