Fourteen people were reported to have died over the weekend in the Chinese city of Shulan due to flooding caused by Typhoon Doksuri.
Northeastern China, Beijing and Hebei province have seen heavy rainfall and floods since the typhoon made landfall in southern Fujian province two weeks ago.
The deaths in Shulan, in northeastern Jilin province, add to the more than 20 who died last week in Beijing and Hebei. Authorities have yet to provide an overall death toll for the entire country.
Three officials were among the dead in Shulan, including a vice mayor of the city of about 587,000 people, state media reported.
Water levels in the city have receded to safe levels and emergency response efforts have been mobilised to relocate residents and repair infrastructure. Power had been restored to 14,305 homes, state media reported.
Regional authorities said sections of the Songhua, the main river in northeastern China, and the Nenjiang tributary remained at dangerously high levels.
Over the past five days, rainfall in the south of Heilongjiang’s capital Harbin and nearby city Mudanjiang, in northern Jilin province and in Yanbian in its east have recorded cumulative precipitation of almost or more than 100mm, the national forecaster said.
Li Yujie, 47, weeps outside her flood-stricken hardware store after the rains and floods brought by remnants of Typhoon Doksuri, in Zhuozhou, Hebei province, China, on Monday.