The death toll from flash floods and landslides in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) has risen beyond 200, with many more people still missing, local authorities in the province of South Kivu said.
Thomas Bakenge, administrator of Kalehe, the worst-hit territory, told reporters on the scene on Saturday that 203 bodies had been recovered so far, but that efforts to find others were continuing.
In the village of Nyamukubi, where hundreds of homes were washed away, rescue workers and survivors dug through the ruins looking for more bodies in the mud.
Photo: Reuters
Villagers wept as they gathered around some of the bodies recovered so far, which lay on the grass covered in muddy cloths near a rescue workers post.
Grieving survivor Anuarite Zikujuwa said she had lost her entire family, including her in-laws, as well as many of her neighbors.
“The whole village has been turned into a wasteland. There’s only stones left and we can’t even tell where our land once was,” she said.
Michake Ntamana, a rescue worker helping look for and bury the dead, said villagers were trying to identify and collect the bodies of loved ones found so far.
He said that some bodies washed down from villages higher in the hills were being buried shrouded just in leaves off the trees.
“It’s truly sad because we have nothing else here,” he said.
Rivers on Thursday broke their banks in villages in the territory of Kalehe, close to the shores of Lake Kivu. Authorities have reported scores of people injured.
One survivor said the flash floods came so fast that they took everyone by surprise.
South Kivu Governor Theo Ngwabidje visited the area to see the destruction. He wrote Twitter that the provincial government had dispatched medical, shelter and food supplies.
Several main roads to the affected area had been made impassable by the rains, hampering the relief efforts.
Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi has declared a national day of mourning for today to honor the victims, and the central government is sending a crisis management team to South Kivu to support the provincial government.
Heavy rains in the past few days have brought misery to thousands in East Africa, with parts of Uganda and Kenya also seeing heavy rainfall.
Flooding and landslides in Rwanda, which borders DR Congo, left 129 people dead earlier this week.
“This is the fourth time that such damage has been caused by the same rivers. Not 10 years pass without them causing enormous damage,” Bakenge said.
OPTIMISTIC: A Philippine Air Force spokeswoman said the military believed the crew were safe and were hopeful that they and the jet would be recovered A Philippine Air Force FA-50 jet and its two-person crew are missing after flying in support of ground forces fighting communist rebels in the southern Mindanao region, a military official said yesterday. Philippine Air Force spokeswoman Colonel Consuelo Castillo said the jet was flying “over land” on the way to its target area when it went missing during a “tactical night operation in support of our ground troops.” While she declined to provide mission specifics, Philippine Army spokesman Colonel Louie Dema-ala confirmed that the missing FA-50 was part of a squadron sent “to provide air support” to troops fighting communist rebels in
ECONOMIC DISTORTION? The US commerce secretary’s remarks echoed Elon Musk’s arguments that spending by the government does not create value for the economy US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick on Sunday said that government spending could be separated from GDP reports, in response to questions about whether the spending cuts pushed by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency could possibly cause an economic downturn. “You know that governments historically have messed with GDP,” Lutnick said on Fox News Channel’s Sunday Morning Futures. “They count government spending as part of GDP. So I’m going to separate those two and make it transparent.” Doing so could potentially complicate or distort a fundamental measure of the US economy’s health. Government spending is traditionally included in the GDP because
Two daughters of an Argentine mountaineer who died on an icy peak 40 years ago have retrieved his backpack from the spot — finding camera film inside that allowed them a glimpse of some of his final experiences. Guillermo Vieiro was 44 when he died in 1985 — as did his climbing partner — while descending Argentina’s Tupungato lava dome, one of the highest peaks in the Americas. Last year, his backpack was spotted on a slope by mountaineer Gabriela Cavallaro, who examined it and contacted Vieiro’s daughters Guadalupe, 40, and Azul, 44. Last month, the three set out with four other guides
Sri Lanka’s fragile economic recovery could be hampered by threatened trade union strikes over reduced benefits for government employees in this year’s budget, the IMF said yesterday. Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s maiden budget raised public sector salaries, but also made deep cuts to longstanding perks in a continuing effort to repair the island nation’s tattered finances. Sri Lanka’s main doctors’ union is considering a strike from today to protest against cuts to their allowances, while teachers are also considering stoppages. IMF senior mission chief for Sri Lanka Peter Breuer said the budget was the “last big push” for the country’s austerity