
This picture taken on June 4, 2014 shows rescuers helping two children cross a heavily flooded street in Shiqian county of Tongren, southwest China's Guizhou province
China's central Hunan Province was one of the worst hit, where seven people died. Also badly affected was Jiangxi province in the east where another five people lost their lives and in Guangxi Zhuang, an autonomous region in the south of the country, where another two people perished, China's Xinhua news agency reports.
In Hunan a total of ten cities and 47 counties were affected by the rainstorms and 171,000 people have had to be relocated. The economic cost to the region is $251 million, with 122,700 hectares of crops damaged.

Residents make their way through a heavily-flooded street in Anshun city in Pingba county, southwest China's Guizhou province on June 3, 2014.
In Jiangxi province four of the five deaths happened when a school building collapsed. Local officials reported that 789,000 people had been affected and 123,000 of them had to be relocated.

This picture taken on June 4, 2014 shows cars parked on a heavily flooded street in Shiqian county of Tongren, southwest China's Guizhou province.
In Guangxi region, 118,700 people have been affected with 2,341 already forced to relocate.

Rescue workers push a vehicle on a flooded street in Qinzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, June 11, 2014.
A Grade 4 alert means the authorities are obliged to be on a 24-hour alert, give daily damage reports and dispatch money and relief materials within 48 hours.

A resident takes a picture of himself standing in flood waters at a flooded area of Wujiaba airport in Kunming, Yunnan province June 9, 2014






