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WATER WORLD
Two dead, one missing after Malaysia dam water floods river
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Oct 23, 2013


Water released from a dam caused a river to flood in a Malaysian highland region Wednesday, leaving two foreigners dead with another missing and destroying 80 homes.

Authorities have recovered the bodies of an Indonesian woman and a Bangladeshi man who drowned when the Bertam River in the Cameron Highlands overflowed, said district police chief Zahari Busu.

A 17-year-old Indonesian girl is still missing, while at least 80 squatter homes along the river have been destroyed, he said.

The water had to be released from the dam following heavy rain to prevent it from bursting, he added.

"The floodgates were opened as there was too much water. The river couldn't take it," Zahari said.

The Cameron Highlands, a tea plantation region and former British colonial retreat that is popular with tourists, is known for its misty, rainy weather and steep hillsides.

Landslides in the area, some 300 kilometres (200 miles) north of the capital Kuala Lumpur, are common. A landslide in a village occupied by indigenous people killed seven in 2011.

Many foreigners from Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nepal and other poorer countries in the region work in the tea plantations as well as vegetable and fruit farms.

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Dams provide resilience to Columbia from climate change impacts
Corvallis OR (SPX) Oct 02, 2013
Dams have been vilified for detrimental effects to water quality and fish passage, but a new study suggests that these structures provide "ecological and engineering resilience" to climate change in the Columbia River basin. The study, which was published in the Canadian journal Atmosphere-Ocean, looked at the effects of climate warming on stream flow in the headwaters and downstream reach ... read more


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