Two dead amid extreme rain and flash flooding in Hong Kong
The city recorded more than 600mm of rain – a quarter of its average annual rainfall.
Heavy rain in Hong Kong and southern China has flooded city streets and some subway stations, with hundreds of people evacuated and two deaths reported in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong authorities said during a joint news conference that the extreme weather was expected to last until at least midnight (5pm BST), with widespread flooding and heavy disruptions to public transport in multiple districts.
An official from the Hong Kong observatory said the city had recorded more than 600mm of rain so far – a quarter of the city’s average annual rainfall.
Hong Kong police said that two bodies were found floating in waters in different parts of the city.
The city’s fire services department said it had evacuated 110 people and assisted 20 injured people.
The city’s response to the rain and floods has drawn criticism from residents online, who questioned the authorities’ preparedness for such an emergency.
Senior Hong Kong official Eric Chan said that the predictability of rainfall “cannot be compared with that of a typhoon”.
Videos circulating on social media show flooded streets in Hong Kong and nearby Guangdong province, with vehicles driving through the water and rescue teams using rafts to navigate the streets.
Water rushed down the stairs and escalators of a flooded subway station in Hong Kong, and cars were caught in muddy water on flooded streets, including in the cross-harbour tunnel that connects Hong Kong Island with Kowloon.
The heavy downpours led Hong Kong and the mainland city of Shenzhen to close schools, and nonessential workers in Hong Kong were urged to stay home Friday.
Most bus services in Hong Kong were halted.
On the mainland, more than 11,000 people were evacuated from water-logged areas in Meizhou, a city in Guangdong province, according to state broadcaster CCTV. Trains and flights were suspended in Guangdong and several landslides blocked roads the report said.
Shenzhen’s total rainfall was 469mm (18.4in) – the heaviest rainfall since Shenzhen started meteorological records in 1952, CCTV said.
Beijing issued a flood disaster warning for several districts of the Chinese capital, forecasting heavy rainfall through until Saturday night.
The city observatory attributed Friday’s rain to a trough of low pressure associated with the remnants of a recent typhoon.