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Chinese Mandarin - Text messages help 150,000 survive early morning flood

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Text messages help 150,000 survive early morning flood

www.chinanews.cn 2007-07-11 10:18:29

(Source: Xinhua)

July 11 - More than 150,000 people in southwest China survived an early
morning flood thanks to timely government warnings delivered by mobile
phone text messages, loudspeakers and door-to-door visits.
"The flood was so sudden I would have drowned if I had not received the
messages," said Zhang Xue'an, a resident of Qujiang in Quxian in Sichuan
Province.
He began to receive messages on his mobile phone on July 3, and was told
by local flood control authorities that a flood was only a few days away.
He bought biscuits and bottled water, which proved very useful when his
home was flooded three days later and water and gas supplies were cut off.
About half of the 150,000-strong residents in Qujiang have mobile phones,
which means text messages are a very rapid means of spreading flood
information.
Wang Chenggao, owner of a stationery shop, moved his belongings to the
top floor of his house after receiving messages, managing to preserve the
family assets including the stock of stationery.
The worst flood on record hit Qujiang at 3 a.m. on July 7, submerging two
thirds of the town's streets and flooding the first floor of many houses.
To warn families with no mobile phones, authorities put flood information
on the local television channel and used loudspeakers in the countryside.
Sirens resounded in the county seat to alert residents.
Zhang Kaifu and his family managed to avoid the landslide that engulfed
three rooms of his house on Thursday evening in Sanhui Town. Zheng knew
from listening to loudspeakers that there was a high risk of a landslide
and had time to evacuate items from the house.
In remote areas where radios and telephones are not used, grassroots
officials went to inform residents on foot.
Gao Mingwen, party chief of Qujiang Town, detected a possible landslide
during an inspection late on Thursday night. He went door to door to
inform the families threatened by the possible landslide and helped 31
people evacuate, preventing an accident that could have cost many lives.
"After warnings were spread by texts messages and loudspeakers, we were
ordered to visit every family personally and ensure that none was
threatened by a flood or a landslide," said Sun Xiaoyan, party chief of
Sanhui Town.
Tianxing Town ordered every official to take care of a family that might
be affected. Li Jinsong, headmaster of the local primary school, risked
floodwater reaching his waist to visit his designated family. "I had to
make sure they were safe, or I would have been punished," Li said.
Quxian county suffered from floods in 2004 and 2005. The experience
taught local authorities that it was critical to inform people in
flood-prone areas in time.
"The earlier (people are informed) the better! They know how to protect
themselves," said Yang Xuechun, head of Quxian flood control office.
About 115,000 people have been evacuated in Quxian this year because of
floods and 38,000 others rescued by boat.

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