Authorities in Hebei said they would try to ensure residents forced to move could return home or move into new residences before winter.
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More than 40,000 houses collapsed and over 150,000 others were seriously damaged in the torrential rains and floods that affected 110 counties in Hebei, Zhang said.
Zhang added that 1,150 schools and 1,871 medical facilities were damaged.
The Hebei provincial government said it was still assessing the damage, but that direct economic losses from the floods had already exceeded 95.8 billion yuan (US$13.4 billion).
On Friday, China’s Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Emergency Management issued 1.46 billion yuan in flood control funds, increasing the total amount to 7.738 billion yuan this year
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A village in the city of Xingtai reported receiving 1,008.5mm (39.7 inches) of rain during the recent storms, more than any other locality in the province, Zhang said.
Earlier this month, Beijing, which neighbours Hebei, announced rainfall in the capital city hit 745mm during the storms, breaking a 140-year record.
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China floods: call to evacuate residents ‘without delay’ as second typhoon threatens
China floods: call to evacuate residents ‘without delay’ as second typhoon threatens
The National Meteorological Centre warned on Friday morning that Beijing, Hebei, and the port city of Tianjin would be hit by torrential rain from Friday afternoon to Saturday morning. It said there would be a “high degree of overlap” between the areas hit by the rain and those affected by the earlier floods.
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The last time Hebei province suffered severe flooding was in July 2016, when 130 people were killed.
At a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Premier Li Qiang asked local governments in flood-hit areas to start reconstruction without delay and “maintain the stability of society”.
Vice-Premier Zhang Guoqing assessed disaster relief work in Hebei on Monday and asked local authorities to help flood-hit areas return to normal as soon as possible, come up with reconstruction plans and issue compensation for those affected.
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