So far, Fujian province has prepared 12,000 tents, 50,000 quilts, 80,000 
items of clothing and a five-day supply of food for 300,000 people, Xinhua said. 
Fujian was still trying to cope with the impact of Bilis, which struck 
mainland China on July 14, killing at least 43 people in the province. 
Zhejiang, which did not suffer too badly from Bilis, was preparing for a much 
tougher time with 80,000 people evacuated by Tuesday due to the approach of 
Kaemi, Xinhua said. 
Neighboring Guangdong province to the south, where 106 people were killed 
from Bilis, was also making preparations for the strong winds and heavy rain 
from Kaemi, even though it was not expected to be directly hit. 
Bilis killed at least 612 people in southern, eastern and central China, with 
208 still missing, according to the latest figures released by the government 
Monday. 
China's east coast is regularly hit by storms and typhoons in the summer, but 
the number of fatalities, missing people and economic losses are "much greater" 
this year than in 2005, officials said over the weekend. 
The UN's panel on climate change has long held that rising temperatures would 
result in more severe rain storms in south and central China and drought in the 
north. 
In another separate development during a brutal period of weather for north 
Asia, the International Red Cross said at least 121 people had been killed and 
another 127 missing in North Korea following heavy storms in mid-July. 
Nearly 17,000 families had been left homeless in five North Korean provinces 
with rain totally or partially destroying 23,400 houses, the Red Cross 
said.