‘Once-in-a-century’ rain leaves three dead


Cut off: An aerial view of flooding caused by torrential rain in Yesan. — Reuters

At least three people were killed and more than 1,000 evacuated after the country was hit by torrential rains, officials said, with one region pummelled by the most rainfall per hour since full records began.

South Korea typically experiences monsoon rains in July, but three areas in the country’s South Chungcheong province this week saw some of the heaviest hourly downpours on record, official weather data showed.

Three people were killed yesterday, the Interior and Safety Ministry said, all in South Chuncheong province.

“As of 4pm local time at least three people have died today due to torrential rains,” an official said, adding that more than 1,000 people had been evacuated.

Police said that one person was found inside a submerged vehicle, an elderly man was swept away near a stream, and another elderly man had been found dead in a flooded basement apartment after his son reported him missing.

The western Seosan area was hit by rainfall peaking at 114.9mm per hour, “a level typically seen only once in 100 years”, a weather agency official said, adding that this was the highest rate since full records began in 1904.

The aftermath: A woman cleaning the flooded floor of her hair salon caused by torrential rain in Gwangju; (below) and Fire Services rescue members searching for missing people after a 10m-high (33-foot) retaining wall from an overpass collapsed onto the road in Osan. — Reuters/AFP
The aftermath: A woman cleaning the flooded floor of her hair salon caused by torrential rain in Gwangju; (below) and Fire Services rescue members searching for missing people after a 10m-high (33-foot) retaining wall from an overpass collapsed onto the road in Osan. — Reuters/AFP

The heavy rains were due to “warm and moist air flowing in along the edge of the North Pacific High, triggering strong atmospheric instability”, the official added.

South Korean broadcasters ran videos of severe flooding in Seosan, with water swamping markets and apartment complexes, as well as submerging parked cars.

AFP reporters saw residents in Seosan struggling to clean up the aftermath of the floods yesterday, with parking lots and shops still seen flooded with muddy water.

Choi Hee-jin, a nightclub owner, said it had been “heartbreaking” to return to her business after the floods had swept through.

“Water had completely filled the club, and everything – sofas, fridges, furniture, even computers – was just floating around,” Choi said.

“How do you think it feels to see that? Honestly, it felt like the world was collapsing. There are no words to describe it.”

The national weather agency said in a statement that nearly 440mm of rain had fallen in Seosan by 10.30am yesterday – equivalent to 35% of the region’s average annual rainfall.

“The water is just too deep and so much mud has been pushed in that I’ve already been working for about five hours trying to drain it all out,” said Kim Min-seo, a 50-year-old restaurant worker, as she scrubbed the muddy floor.

“I’m still not done,” she added.

Residents in Hongseong county, in South Chungcheong province, were ordered to “evacuate immediately to a safe location” early Thursday morning due to flooding from a nearby stream.

South Korea is regularly hit by flooding during the summer monsoon period, but is typically well-prepared and the death toll is usually relatively low.

Scientists say climate change has made weather events around the world more extreme and frequent.

South Korea also endured record-breaking rains and flooding in 2022, which left at least 11 people dead. — AFP

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