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Hunter Rose
Flood In China

There is some speculation that the floods in China is affecting the ability for us to import toys into America (sounds really petty when you say it out loud like that)

Whats worse is that most people say - Huh what floods? And anyway i didnt see a thread so here it is - this is just one quick google'd Article.
maybe y'all can post more as you find them.
QUOTE
More Rain In Flood-Ravaged China
YUEYANG, China, August 26, 2002(CBS) A pre-dawn thunderstorm packing high winds and torrential rains hit the area around central China's Dongting Lake early Monday, raising the threat to already strained dikes protecting several cities and dozens of villages where hundreds of thousands of people live.

The rain-bloated lake in Hunan province had started to recede Sunday after a flood crest in the Yangtze River safely passed, but storms could push water levels back up again.

Floods and landslides have killed about 1,000 people across China since the rainy season began in June. More than 200 of those deaths were reported in Hunan.

Forecasters had predicted that the northern part of Hunan and the western provinces of Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan could be deluged by up to two more inches of rain by Tuesday. The storm came after days of clear skies and hot weather.

The lake is already about six feet above the danger mark at which officials feel there is a threat to the dikes rimming the 1,560-square-mile Dongting Lake - China's second largest - and along rivers flowing into it.

At 5 a.m., lightning streaked the skies and rain poured down on the streets of Yueyang, a lakeside city of 600,000, where residents were already beginning their week. Some sloshed through streets, barefoot.

"Of course we're worried about this rain. If this continues, it could get very serious," said Zhuan, a man sitting at a food stall on the waterfront, where puddles are already ankle-deep in some places.

Xu Bang, a taxi-driver, was more optimistic.

"This rain is nothing," Xu said. "Don't worry. This place will never flood."

After about three hours, the storm abated and turned into a steady drizzle.

State media said a crest on the Yangtze River reached Yueyang late Saturday and pushed Dongting to its highest level this year.

The peak safely passed and the elaborate, 580-mile system of dikes around the lake - fortified and protected in the past week by an army of more than 1 million soldiers and residents - remained intact.

Water levels have dropped 0.35 inches at Chenglingji, near Yueyang, where the Yangtze meets the lake.

While thousands of homes along Dongting's edge outside the embankment have flooded and islands in the lake have been swamped, residents are used to the effect of flooding, a near-annual occurrence in the area.

Life has gone on mostly undisrupted in Yueyang.

Further south, however, villagers in Yangliuyuan struggled to cope with waters up to 13 feet deep in some areas.

"The impact on our lives is huge," said farmer Wu Yuanxi.

About 2,000 people have been evacuated to nearby schools and public buildings, said France Hurtubise, a Beijing-based regional spokeswoman for the International Federation of the Red Cross.

"It's sad and it's terrible. There's water as far as the eye can see," Hurtubise said. Only tips of telephone poles were visible and many houses were completely submerged. Remaining residents waded their way through daily chores.

In the west, scores of houses along the Huarong river, which flows into the Dongting Lake, were flooded, some up to their roofs.

Zhang Jinchun, 58, left his home about two weeks ago.

"When the water level rose one level, we moved one level," Zhang said.

"The situation now is serious. We're scared our homes will collapse, we're scared for our future generations," he said. "If things get worse, what'll we do?"

After coursing through Dongting, the flood crest is headed for the central Chinese metropolis of Wuhan in Hubei province just to the north of the lake.

A state of emergency has been declared along the flood-swollen Yangtze River in the major industrial city of Wuhan in Hubei province.

Li, a Wuhan flood control official, said inspection crews were working around the clock to prepare for the flood crest, which was expected to hit the city on Tuesday morning.

"I've worked in this office for over 20 years and I witnessed the 1998 floods. This year, the water levels are not as high as in 1998," said Li.

Nonetheless, nearly 20,000 civilians and flood control officials are posted along river bank in Wuhan, with tons of sand and gravel to shore up the embankments.

Officials in Wuhan say embankments protecting their city have been reinforced considerably since 1998, when China's worst floods in half a century killed 4,000 people.

Germany, where floodwaters are receding after causing billions in damage in the past two weeks, is providing one million sandbags to help protect Wuhan.

In Changsha, Hunan's capital, officials emerging from a flood emergency meeting said waters are expected to remain high through early September.

Teams of six people have been posted every 165 feet to watch the dikes along the Xiangjiang river, which runs through Changsha and into Dongting Lake. The city has ordered 2,000 troops and 300,000 public employees to help battle the high waters.

� MMII, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press and Reuters Limited contributed to this report.
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EDIT:
Hunter is an idiot - here is a current article:
QUOTE
Hu tours flood-hit area as storm toll hits 152
(AP)
Updated: 2007-07-22 21:13

BEIJING - China's president visited a flood-battered southern city on Sunday, expressing condolences and vowing to help the thousands affected as the death toll from rain-triggered floods, landslides and mud flows across the nation rose to 152 from this week alone.


Chinese president Hu Jintao talks with flood-stricken residents in southwest China's Chongqing on July 22, 2007. The death toll from rain-triggered floods, landslides, and mud flows across the nation rose to 152 from this week alone. [Xinhua]Since the start of the annual rainy season in May, floods have hit nearly half of China's regions and killed at least 400 people, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

In the southwestern city of Chongqing, 42 people died and 12 have been reported missing. Another 300,000 people have been evacuated.

China Central Television's Sunday night news broadcast showed President Hu Jintao slogging through Chonqqing's flooded streets in black galoshes and visiting with city residents whose homes had been inundated.

Hu was shown chatting with an elderly man living in a washed out apartment, asking, "How high was the water? Are you having any problems getting enough food? Do you have all the things you need to cook your rice?"

During a speech in the city's flooded Shapingba district, Hu told residents that the Communist Party and government were concerned about their welfare and would do everything possible to care for them.

"You all have suffered," Hu told a small crowd gathered on the street. "This once-in-a-century rain disaster has destroyed your homes and washed away your belongings, causing significant losses. I am sad as you are sad. We must have the determination and courage to overcome this."

Chinese media have reported that 266.6 millimeters (10.5 inches) of rain fell between Monday night and Tuesday afternoon in Chongqing, the largest volume since records began in 1892. The previous record of 206.1 millimeters (8.1 inches) was set on July 1996.

Hu spent Saturday and Sunday in Chongqing, also visiting People's Liberation Army soldiers carrying out recovery work and local entrepreneurs, Central Television said.

Even harder hit this week was southern China's Yunnan province, where rain triggered floods and landslides from Wednesday to Saturday. More than 4,000 houses were destroyed and 386,000 people evacuated, Xinhua said. It cited the Ministry of Civil Affairs as saying that 59 people were killed in Yunnan, most of them caught in violent mud flows on Thursday.

Eastern China's Shandong province was also badly hit, with 40 reported dead and another nine missing. Some 112,600 were evacuated. The rain inflicted severe damage to the province's transportation and telecommunications systems, Xinhua said.

Jinan, Shandong's capital and the worst-hit city, received up to 118 millimeters (4.65 inches) of rain in an hour during a storm on Wednesday.

According to Xinhua, officials at the Shandong Department of Water Resources said the rainstorm was the worst since 1916, when Jinan began to record such data.

In the far western Xinjiang region, torrential rainfall caused 11 deaths and injured more than 100, it said.

Summer is peak rainy season in China, where millions of people in the central and southern part of the country live on farmland in the flood plains of rivers.

Flooding and typhoons killed 2,704 people last year, according to the China Meteorological Administration. That was the second-deadliest year on record after 1998, when summer flooding claimed 4,150 lives.

Also Sunday, Xinhua reported that the middle and lower reaches of the Huai River, China's third longest, are facing the danger of flooding after days of rain.

More than 1 million people have been evacuated in central China's Henan, Anhui and Jiangsu provinces from the projected path of floodwaters along the Huai, which could suffer its worst flooding since 1954 if dams and flood walls break.

There have been no reports yet of any deaths from rain or flood along the Huai.
Father Time
I had heard of the floods some time ago, but I figured they had already subsided, because I hadn;t heard anything new about it. Which is also quite sad: As long as its 'new', you get to hear about it, but if somthing even 'newer' comes around, you no longer hear anything about it, and it is forgotten.

Personally, I couldn't care less about how floods would affect my toy distribution. I'd say that a flood is quite a fair excuse for something like that.
Taaron
QUOTE (HunterRose @ Aug 8 2007, 05:08 PM) *
Flood In China

There is some speculation that the floods in China is affecting the ability for us to import toys into America (sounds really petty when you say it out loud like that)

Whats worse is that most people say - Huh what floods? And anyway i didnt see a thread so here it is - this is just one quick google'd Article.
maybe y'all can post more as you find them.
QUOTE

More Rain In Flood-Ravaged China
YUEYANG, China, August 26, 2002(CBS)



Can we still say "Huh, what floods?"

or are these floods are still affecting distribution, after roughly 6 years?

Aoi
Father Time
QUOTE (AoiJuuni @ Aug 9 2007, 12:46 AM) *
QUOTE (HunterRose @ Aug 8 2007, 05:08 PM) *
Flood In China

There is some speculation that the floods in China is affecting the ability for us to import toys into America (sounds really petty when you say it out loud like that)

Whats worse is that most people say - Huh what floods? And anyway i didnt see a thread so here it is - this is just one quick google'd Article.
maybe y'all can post more as you find them.
QUOTE

More Rain In Flood-Ravaged China
YUEYANG, China, August 26, 2002(CBS)



Can we still say "Huh, what floods?"

or are these floods are still affecting distribution, after roughly 6 years?

Aoi

Good point, but the fact is, fairly recently, China did get flooded (again).
Hunter Rose
lol sometimes hunter is unobservant

Main post edited
Taaron
Thanks for the update, HR!

Anywho, I'm still not sure if this is the case. Hasbro's distribution in recent years has always been spotty...but if it was the case, we'd see a lot more toy sites reporting it as news.

I'd certainly see some smaller frequently less-reliable toy, etc. outfits trying to use it as an excuse in their latest excuse in a long list of excuses, though.

but with that said, I hope they can get the aide they need quickly...and better than what was received over here with the recent floods.

Aoi
skullfire
Well new GI JOes are nowhere on the shelves like they were expected to be. But then again you know those "hillbilly" Joe fans, something like a flood in China would be easy to miss hahahahahahahaha
MikePrime
QUOTE (skullfire @ Aug 8 2007, 11:05 PM) *
Well new GI JOes are nowhere on the shelves like they were expected to be. But then again you know those "hillbilly" Joe fans, something like a flood in China would be easy to miss hahahahahahahaha



Hillbilly? I'll have you G.I. Joe fans are a lot better than Transformers fans. You won't find the idiocy of Transformers boards on G.I. Joe boards.


Now then, new Joes shipped to stores on June 25th. It's basically the fault of stores, dragging their feet and taking time for their precious "resets", that delays the Joes from being on the shelves.
DarkNarcoleptic
QUOTE (MikePrime @ Aug 9 2007, 12:29 AM) *
Hillbilly? I'll have you G.I. Joe fans are a lot better than Transformers fans.

The Joe Con was in Atlanta, Georgia this year BTW
Lord Madhammer
and GI Joe gives you the AIDS, everyone knows that
skullfire
QUOTE (MikePrime @ Aug 8 2007, 10:29 PM) *
QUOTE (skullfire @ Aug 8 2007, 11:05 PM) *
Well new GI JOes are nowhere on the shelves like they were expected to be. But then again you know those "hillbilly" Joe fans, something like a flood in China would be easy to miss hahahahahahahaha



Hillbilly? I'll have you G.I. Joe fans are a lot better than Transformers fans. You won't find the idiocy of Transformers boards on G.I. Joe boards.



Really, you sure about that?

Here's a quick sample of how Joe Fans talk to each other:


-"What? How is this possible? I thought that it was written on a stone tablet that Targets across the nation would have these on that magical date of 8-05-2007!?!"


-"I am going to pass this along to our Target expert, ________________... Any comments, Mr. Target?"


-"Yeah........GROW UP!!!!!! They will be in this week....like I said before...."On Aug 5TH or that week" My Walmart and Target had them both on Sunday Aug 5TH....maybe you still live in the backwoods....but you have them so what does it matter?"


-"Lose the attitude... It's not impressing anyone...

Your coming across as this little kid who keeps whining cause no one is listening to him..."


-"Let me get this straight.....You can talk all the smack YOU want to and its all good, but when I do its me having an attitude???? You might as well BAN me now because everytime you say something smart ass to me...I will reply in kind...jerk!!! Ive got an idea.....shut up!!! I could careless about TRYING to help out here....Im done and Im out....I never knew you fANBOYS COULD BE such........... JERKS!!!!! FYI I dont want to impress you dude...I just got tired of SOME of you whinning about these not being out when Hasbro never really intended them to be out till this week anyway.....its called "TESTING THE MARKET" for the product...to see how well they will sale. Thats why only Certain Wally Worlds and TRU....had them.

If anyones acting like a little kid....dude that would be a big fat YOU....by the way The U. Marvel Fury is better (Opps I was being a little whiny kid)

Just drop this!!!"

Damn these boys are temperamental

I haven't seen flame like this since burning man...and they don't lock the threads either, hahahahahahaha

But MikePrime, you're a smart enough TFan, you know better. I'm just having a few laughs cause it was easy. Don't take me seriously I'm just having fun.

Besides we all know that TFans are girly men with hot Asian/Latino models as girlfriends, Star Wars fans are just a bunch old nerds, and GI Joe fans are former marines who live out in the back woods of Georgia and are a slightly unruly bunch.
All of this that I wrote is B/S and just for laughs.

Now back on topic. I just got through looking at the Joe sites and it seems that every body has found their newly released figures...everywhere!

What does that mean? It means that the flood has nothing to do with the weird shortage of transformers. Soooooo we can take the China flood out of the equation.

It is sad that the flood happened as it did, I just hope their government can get the survivors back to where they belong. I feel for their loss.

I just don't get why there was hardly any press on it here in the states?
Bestimus Mucho
Didn't china just finish the world's largest dam to stop this from happening?
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