China Naming Network - Almanac query - In typhoon weather, two cars fell from a broken bridge into Hanoi. Why are the police just watching?

In typhoon weather, two cars fell from a broken bridge into Hanoi. Why are the police just watching?

Because the typhoon landed and caused flooding, the surging river made it very difficult to rescue, and because of the serious disaster, the flood quickly washed away the cars floating on the water. There was no time to rescue in time, so the police could only watch two cars fall from the broken bridge into Hanoi in typhoon weather. So it's not that I didn't want to save it, but because there was no way to save it in time.

Typhoon "Haibeisi" is continuing to ravage Japan, and rivers everywhere are also flooding on a large scale. A bridge over a river in Nagano Prefecture, Japan, was broken by the surging river, causing two cars to fall into the river. Three people in one car struggled to climb ashore and were finally rescued, while three people in another car were unfortunately washed away by the river. The bridge on the Qianquchuan River in Nagano Prefecture, Japan, was washed away by the surging river, causing two cars to fall into the river. After the incident, the local fire brigade and rescue team rushed to the scene to rescue.

Because the place where the two cars crashed into the river was 5 meters away from the road, a white minivan fell directly into the water in a rollover state, and three people in the other car managed to escape from the car and climbed to the side of the road to be rescued. But a man in the other car gave up because the door was too heavy to open. Search and rescue personnel tried many ways to get close to the car. It's a pity that the flood is getting bigger and bigger, and soon the slope is washed away, and the car is also washed away by the flood. So the search and rescue personnel can do nothing, not watch.

To sum up, it is because of the skyrocketing river that the rescue is extremely difficult. You know, water is so fast that people can't be faster than water, so rescuers can only watch these three people being swept away by the flood. In addition, Typhoon Haibeisi landed in central Japan, causing extensive damage. Nearly hundreds of thousands of households lost power, more than 3 million people had to evacuate, and rainfall also caused floods in many rivers.