CHINA - A series of severe storms across China has claimed at least 15 lives, with hundreds injured and tens of thousands evacuated. President Xi Jinping has called for "all out" rescue efforts.

In the southern Guangxi region, Typhoon Maysak brought intense rain and flooding that killed four people and forced over 50,000 evacuations, with eight still missing. Dramatic footage showed muddy water rushing past a burst reservoir dam, while rescue workers searched for survivors in inflatable boats. A viral social media video captured villagers trying to catch hundreds of snakes that escaped from a flooded breeding farm.
In central Hubei province, thunderstorms and gale-force winds killed 11 people and injured 331. One person remains missing, nearly 4,800 houses were damaged, and 22 collapsed. A local man described how his brother-in-law was "sucked out" of his home by the winds and found unconscious outside his apartment. Authorities raised the flood control emergency response to its highest level in Nanning, Guangxi's capital. Separately, a landslide in northwestern Gansu province killed five people, with another 12 missing. Rescue teams located 21 trapped individuals, but five died despite medical efforts. Authorities have allocated 30 million yuan ($4.4 million) in reconstruction funds.
Flood peaks exceeding warning levels by more than six meters are expected at Guangxi's Guigang Hydrological Station. The water resources minister warned that persistent heavy rainfall poses a severe test to reservoir and embankment safety. Scientists note that extreme weather events are intensifying globally due to fossil fuel emissions. China, the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter, aims to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. At least 22 people were killed in similar storms in May. (Bssnews)