World

Beijing cancels flights, closes schools as storm hits

Authorities warn of extreme weather in capital, neighbouring areas, with a landslide already reported

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 12 Jul 2021 5:00PM

Beijing cancels flights, closes schools as storm hits
A man’s umbrella is flipped as he pedals along a street in Beijing today. The capital city has been hit with torrential downpours and gale-force winds. – AFP pic, July 12, 2021

BEIJING – Hundreds of flights were cancelled in Beijing, as schools and tourist sites were shut due to torrential downpours and gale-force winds today.

City authorities issued warnings to residents to stay home as the Chinese capital faced its biggest storm this year.

As much as 100mm of rain is predicted through the day in some areas, and aviation tracker VariFlight recorded some 700 flights cancelled at the city’s two airports.

Weather authorities warned of “extreme rainstorms”, plus thunder and lightning from late yesterday to this evening here and in neighbouring areas.

A landslide was recorded in a northern district, with state broadcaster CCTV showing pictures of a road blocked by fallen rocks.

Heavy rain is holding up efforts to clear the road, according to state TV.

Children stayed home as the city’s kindergartens, and primary and secondary schools closed today.

Popular attractions including a part of the Great Wall were also shut, with some districts suspending rural homestays.

Some of Beijing’s automatic driving trains will be operated manually instead, said state media.

Rainstorms also hit neighbouring Tianjin city, where state TV showed electric scooters driving through flooded streets and black skies lit up by regular flashes of lightning.

Weather authorities have warned of floods in 14 rivers, including tributaries in Sichuan and Shaanxi.

Floods are common during China’s rainy season, with higher water levels in August last year washing away roads and forcing tens of thousands from their homes.

But the threat has worsened over the decades, due in part to widespread construction of dams and levees that have cut connections between the river and adjacent lakes and floodplains that had helped absorb the summer surge. – AFP, July 12, 2021

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