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Politics

Heavy Rain Leaves 30 Dead in Chinese Capital

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 29th July 2025, 2:39 PM

Heavy Rain Leaves 30 Dead in Chinese Capital

Torrential rainfall in Beijing, the capital of China, has resulted in the death of 30 people and the evacuation of over 80,000 residents, according to state media reports on Tuesday. The intense weather event forms part of a larger system of rainstorms battering much of northern China, including the provinces of Hebei, Jilin, and Shandong.

The fatalities were confirmed by Beijing’s Municipal Flood Control Headquarters, as cited by the Xinhua news agency. The most severely affected district is Miyun, a suburban area to the northeast of the city centre. Other heavily impacted districts include Huairou in the north and Fangshan in the southwest.

“Continuous extreme heavy rainfall caused major disasters,”
— Beijing Daily, local state-run media

Impact Overview

Category Details
Total Deaths in Beijing 30 people
Evacuated Residents Over 80,000
Worst-Affected Areas Miyun, Huairou, Fangshan (Beijing)
Road Closures Dozens of roads blocked
Power Outages Over 130 villages without electricity
Other Affected Provinces Hebei, Jilin, Shandong, Tianjin, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Inner Mongolia
Disaster Relief Funding ¥350 million (USD $49 million) nationally; ¥200 million for Beijing

 

Scenes on the Ground

Floodwaters in the worst-hit areas washed away vehicles, power lines, and even entire roads. In Mujiayu town, a reservoir released torrents of water, sweeping away nearby infrastructure.

One resident from Miyun, surnamed Liu, described the moment floodwaters surged past his apartment block, dragging cars with them. AFP journalists on-site witnessed rescue teams using crawler machinery to lift people and pets to safety, wading through knee-deep floodwaters.

In a particularly harrowing rescue, firefighters saved 48 individuals from a flooded elderly care centre, state broadcaster CCTV reported.

National Response and Warnings

President Xi Jinping issued a directive on Monday night urging emergency services and local governments to prepare for worst-case scenarios, accelerate the relocation of at-risk residents, and prioritise search-and-rescue operations.

Beijing Daily stated that local officials are making “all-out efforts” to reduce casualties and locate the missing.

CCTV further reported:

  • A landslide in Chengde, Hebei Province, killed four people with eight still missing.
  • Flash flood warnings remain in effect across multiple regions, particularly in Hebei, until Tuesday evening.
  • A separate disaster relief allocation of ¥200 million has been directed specifically to Beijing.

Recent Natural Disasters in Context

Natural disasters are frequent in China, particularly in summer months, when regions alternate between flooding and extreme heatwaves.

Some recent incidents include:

Date Location Incident Type Casualties / Damage
July 2023 Hebei Province Flooding Over 29 killed, thousands of homes lost
July 2023 Northern China Heavy Rain Over 80 killed
July 2025 Shandong Province Flash Floods 2 dead, 10 missing
July 2025 Sichuan Province Landslide 5 killed, vehicles swept off highway

 

In 2023, reports emerged suggesting Hebei bore the brunt of diverted floodwaters in order to shield Beijing, leading to accusations of unequal disaster management.

Public Advisory

Authorities continue to urge residents to avoid high-risk areas, heed official weather warnings, and prioritise personal safety over travel or non-essential movement.

“Please pay attention to weather forecasts and warnings and do not go to risk areas unless necessary,”
— Beijing Daily

With rainfall expected to persist, the situation remains fluid and under close watch from both local and national emergency services.

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