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An aerial view of flooded downtown Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, June 14, 2008. Several more levees holding back rising flood
waters in the U.S. Midwest broke on Saturday, forcing more evacuations and
emergency actions by officials to limit damage and injuries.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, June 19 (Xinhuanet) -- The U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers warned Wednesday at least 21 levees along the Mississippi River
north of St. Louis, Missouri, are in danger of breaching during the next few
days. A breach Wednesday swamped 47 square miles of prime farmland.
The warning follows at least 20 compromised levees
across the Midwest and along several rivers so far this month that have flooded
tens of thousands of acres, forced thousands of people to evacuate and caused
losses in the billions of dollars.
The only silver lining to the forecast is that the
threatened areas are farmland, not densely populated areas.
Storms and flooding across six states this month have
killed 24 people, injured 148 and caused more than 1.5 billion U.S.
dollars in estimated damage in Iowa alone ¡ª a figure that's likely to
increase as river levels climb in Missouri and Illinois.
FEMA Administrator R. David Paulison said as of
Wednesday afternoon, officials shifted concern to flooding between St. Louis and
the Quad Cities, which include Bettendorf and Davenport in Iowa and Moline and
Rock Island in Illinois.
Paulison said he expects that the lower part of the
Mississippi will absorb the increased water flow without much impact.
The federal government has provided more than 3
million quarts of water, 150 generators, more than 213,000 meals, 13 million
sandbags and 4,000 rolls of plastic sheeting, according to FEMA and Army Corps
tallies.
(Agencies)
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