No Mercy — 680,000+ Displaced as Biggest Dam Collapse Triggers Floods in China!
[Music] Floods like monsters descended upon China once again. This time they came roaring through the mountains of Guijou. Fierce, unrelenting, and merciless. What began as rain soon became a nightmare. In places like Rongjang and Leysan counties, entire communities were swallowed whole. Once busy streets turned into fast flowing rivers in minutes, everything was submerged. Homes, cars, schools, memories, and lives. [Music] Heat. Heat. Eyewitnesses said it felt like nature had turned against them, like a wild beast had broken loose from its cage. The sound of water rushing through narrow alleys and crashing into concrete was deafening. Some described it as a scream from the earth itself. There was no warning loud enough, no wall high enough. The flood came fast. Too fast. Help me. [Applause] [Applause] In R Jang County, the water burst into neighborhoods without mercy. People tried to flee, but there was no time. Entire districts vanished under muddy torancets. Bodies floated in the water, tangled in branches, lifeless. A disaster of this scale wasn’t just a tragedy. It was trauma unfolding in real time. Woo! My goodness. Xiao Tang Yuan, a local resident, had just parked her car into an underground garage when she realized something was wrong. The ground trembled. Within seconds, the water came rushing in. She scrambled out of the car, climbed onto the roof, and started filming. The water slammed into the walls like a wave at sea, she said later, still shaken. My car, my only means of transportation for 6 years, was gone in minutes. And I was sure I wouldn’t survive. But Jao was one of the lucky ones. Others didn’t make it. Videos circulating online showed horrifying scenes. Streets becoming rivers, buildings crumbling, and residents stranded on rooftops waving desperately for help. Entire convoys of cars were swept away with some still having passengers inside. The water rose so quickly that in some areas it reached as high as the fourth floor of buildings within hours. Yeah. Wait. ing who ran a small pharmacy in the heart of RJ Jang lost everything. “We had no time,” she said, wiping her muddy hands across her face, tears mixing with dirt. “The water didn’t just flood the shop, it tore through it. medicine, equipment, all of it destroyed. How do I rebuild from this? Her voice broke as she recalled watching her life’s work drowned in front of her eyes. Why would you bring Authorities labeled it a once in 50 years flood, but residents were skeptical. Many said it felt like a failure that had been building for years. Lynn Xiaolong, a former provincial judge who once served in the region, spoke out candidly. It’s always easy to blame the rain. He said, “But this this was different. This was man-made neglect, corruption, lack of preparation. When the rainy season hits, people should not have to row boats down their own streets. But that’s become normal here. Heat. Heat. According to reports, several upstream reservoirs had released large volumes of water in the days leading up to the disaster. Overwhelming rivers and putting enormous pressure on towns below. Emergency notices were issued, but for many, the help came too late. The government eventually called for mass evacuations. Over 400,000 people were forced to flee their homes. Schools were turned into makeshift shelters. Families gathered on hillsides, watching the waters devour everything they owned. Bridges collapsed under the weight of debris. Power lines snapped. Roads were buried under sludge. Heat. For days, entire districts were cut off. No power, no clean water, no way to communicate with the outside world. The silence that followed was deafening. And beneath that silence lay heartbreak. One of the most heartbreaking scenes was the flooding of the Rang Jang Village Super League football stadium, a symbol of local pride and revival. Once just a grassroots community tournament, it had recently gained national fame, turning RJ into a rising tourist hub. But even that symbol of hope was drowned. Submerged under 7 m of water, the stadium stood lifeless. Only the top of the goalposts peaked through the flood waters. Dreams of children, the spirit of the community, all now underwater. All right. Heat. [Music] Oh, development had started to bloom. roads, businesses, tourism, all signs of a better tomorrow. But with one wave, that progress was washed away. And for many, so was their faith in those tasked with protecting them. Critics didn’t hold back. Questions swirled. Why weren’t the reservoir releases managed better? Why weren’t the evacuation warnings issued earlier? Where were the long promised flood control upgrades? And why year after year does the same destruction repeat itself across China? Heat. Heat. Experts have long warned that climate change and extreme weather events are turning seasonal floods into deadly disasters. But alongside nature’s fury, another truth has emerged. Infrastructure failure, overdevelopment, and political negligence are turning natural hazards into human tragedies. The government has warned about black swan flood events, rare, catastrophic occurrences that can overwhelm entire systems. You’re right there. I don’t think it’s But this was no longer rare. And the system, it wasn’t ready for the people of Rangjang. The aftermath is a daily struggle. Streets caked in mud, homes filled with rot, families digging through ruins, children asking when they can go back to school, and countless stories of loss, of people, of livelihoods, of places that no longer exist. One woman named May Lynn, a retired school teacher, returned to what remained of her two-bedroom home. Heat. [Music] Hey, Heat. [Music] The walls were soaked. Her bookshelf, her life’s collection reduced to pulp. Each book held a memory, a time, a student, a lesson, she said, holding a waterlogged journal. Now they’re just weightless trash floating in the corner. She stood motionless, as if afraid that moving forward meant letting go of everything behind. In a nearby village, survivors gathered every evening around a single portable radio. Heat. Heat. [Music] updates, missing persons reports. Every crackle of the signal carried hope. Some cried when a loved one’s name was read from a list of the rescued. Others simply waited in silence. Grief hung heavy, unspoken, but shared. Children played quietly with makeshift toys, mud bricks, plastic bottles, broken branches, while parents sorted through rubble. What is that? The once ordinary sight of school bags floating in drainage canals became a haunting symbol. Education, routine, innocence, all interrupted. International aid groups have since stepped in, offering tents, food, and sanitation kits. But recovery feels far away. It’s not just about rebuilding homes. It’s about restoring trust, dignity, and a sense of safety. [Music] [Music] This isn’t a crisis that ends when the water goes down, says one volunteer. For these people, this is just the beginning. As R Jang looks ahead, the question remains, how do you rebuild not just infrastructure, but belief? Belief that next time will be different. That systems will hold, that voices will be heard, that the rain won’t always bring ruin. Let’s go. Yeah. [Music] In the end, as the waters receded, what was left was not just destruction, but despair. Wrong Jang stands not just as a victim of a flood, but as a symbol of something deeper, a community crushed between nature’s wrath and human failure. The skies have cleared, but the scars remain.
🌊 Guizhou Flood Disaster | Rongjiang & Leishan Devastated by Sudden Torrents
Once again, catastrophic floods have descended upon China—this time tearing through the mountainous regions of Guizhou with terrifying speed and force. In Rongjiang and Leishan counties, entire communities were submerged within minutes as heavy rain turned into raging rivers, sweeping away homes, cars, schools, and lives.
Eyewitnesses describe the chaos as a living nightmare—walls of water crashing through alleys, uprooting everything in their path. The flood came without mercy, giving people no time to prepare or escape. Some neighborhoods vanished entirely beneath thick, muddy currents.
This video documents the raw devastation and urgent rescue efforts in real time—featuring on-the-ground footage, survivor accounts, and the emotional toll of this unfolding disaster in Guizhou.
📌 🔻 Disclaimer:
This video contains footage of natural disasters — including, but not limited to, floods, storms, earthquakes, wildfires, and landslides — which some viewers may find distressing. Viewer discretion is advised.
Some visuals are a mix of archival and recent footage sourced from global disaster archives, and are used for illustrative and educational purposes only. The narration may be dramatized based on historical and hypothetical events, and the video is not intended to mislead viewers about the timing of any specific incident.
🔔 Subscribe for real-time flood alerts, disaster coverage, and emergency updates from around the world.
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