The Chinese regime has been accused of deliberately flooding another city to protect Beijing from the intensifying flooding.
The Australian Times reported on August 8 that the Chinese regime has been accused of deliberately flooding the city of Zhuzhou and other areas adjacent to Beijing to protect the high-tech industrial zone of the capital, Beijing, from flooding.
Although the scale of the increasing damage and losses caused by the heavy rains that began at 6 a.m. local time on August 1 in Beijing and the subsequent floods are evident in the photos, the Chinese regime reported that the death toll was 11, and 27 Chinese were missing, after which it announced that the death toll due to reactions was more than 200, but the public does not believe this to be true.
According to reports by international news agencies, mountains were flooded by flooding caused by heavy rains in Beijing. China's meteorological department says the heavy rainfall in Beijing was the most severe in 140 years. The disaster also occurred in other provinces in China, and within a week, nearly 130 million Chinese were affected by the typhoon. In He Bai province alone, 974,000 Chinese were evacuated. Although the Chinese authorities hide the state of the disaster and the number of Chinese killed in the disaster, as well as the economic losses and the international community's reaction, the gravity of the situation is revealed by images distributed around the world via social media and the reaction of some Chinese to the Chinese regime's attempt to hide the facts.