At least 100 tourists, including the 38 Vietnamese, became trapped Friday night in Gansu province after a landslide cut off traffic, the official Xinhua News Agency said. They were en route to a nature reserve in Sichuan province, which has been hit the hardest by the storms, and had reached accommodation by later that night following road repair work to free them.
They finally arrived in the central city of Xi'an today morning, but have cancelled their travel plans, Xinhua said, citing local authorities.
Meanwhile, a collapsed dam triggered a flood at a scenic spot in the southern province of Guangxi today afternoon, killing eight tourists and injuring five others, Xinhua reported.
Authorities were searching for an unknown number of missing. It was unclear whether the dam collapsed as a result of the storms.
Sichuan has reported at least 48 storm-related deaths over the past week. A massive mudslide that struck a scenic resort outside the city of Dujiangyan in Sichuan on Wednesday killed 43 people.
Mudslides and flooding are common in China's mountainous areas, killing hundreds of people every year.
In the northwest province of Shaanxi, 26 people died in landslides or house collapses. At least 12 workers were killed in the northern province of Shanxi when a violent rainstorm collapsed an unfinished coal mine workshop.
Another three people were drowned in a car in Hebei province outside Beijing.
