Google – AFP, Esdras Ndikumana (AFP), 10 February 2014
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People look
at destruction caused by heavy landslides on February 10, 2014
in Bujumbura
(AFP, Esdras Ndikumana)
|
Bujumbura —
At least 60 people perished in flooding and landslides in a night of torrential
rain in the Burundi capital that swept away hundreds of homes and cut off roads
and power, officials said Monday.
Police in
Bujumbura said the toll was the highest in living memory from a disaster caused
by freak weather, with scores of people injured.
"The
rain that fell in torrents overnight on the capital caused a disaster,"
Security Minister Gabriel Nizigama told reporters.
"So
far we have registered 60 people killed, 81 wounded and more than 400 houses
destroyed," said Alexis Manirakiza, a spokesman for the Burundi Red Cross,
adding that most of the victims were children.
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People
stand next to a road after a heavy
landslide that destroyed houses on
February
10, 2014 in Bujumbura (AFP,
Esdras Ndikumana)
|
He said
three other provinces close to the capital -- Cibitoke, Bubanza and Bujumbura
Rural -- had also been affected by torrential rain and said the nationwide toll
could yet rise further.
Torrential
rains began battering the city late Sunday and houses in the poorer parts of
town are often built from mud bricks, which offer no resistance to torrents of
water and mud.
"It's
the first time in the history of Bujumbura that we have seen damage on this
scale," Bujumbura mayor Saidi Juma said, calling for "solidarity on a
national and international scale" to help the city cope.
In the
district of Kinama in the hardest hit north of the city, a stream broke its
banks, with waters rising to shoulder level in some places.
By midday
the flooding had subsided, leaving scenes of devastation.
Zawadi, a
mother-of-five, stood in the ruins of her Kinama home, feeding her
five-month-old baby surrounded by jerry cans and muddy clothing.
"I
heard the children shouting during the night," she said, recounting how
she had gone into their room to find them standing up on their bed, which was
already under water.
The whole
family was able to run outside before the walls caved in, but one neighbouring
family was less fortunate, with the parents and their three children crushed to
death.
On the
western outskirts of Bujumbura, residents told similar stories.
"Around
midnight we heard something cracking and we all ran outside for fear the house
would fall on us," said Gaudence Nyandwi, whose father Venant was being
transferred from an improvised stretcher to a car, his face contorted in pain.
'No space
for bodies'
"My
father went back inside to see if he could save anything and the house fell on
him. We think he might have a broken leg," Nyandwi told AFP.
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The bodies
of people who perished in
flooding and landslides in Bujumbura are
laid on the ground before being transported
to morgues (AFP, Esdras Ndikumana)
|
Burials of
the victims began Monday.
Nizigama
said this was because there was not enough space for their bodies in the
capital's mortuaries.
He was
speaking at a police station in the worst affected northern part of Bujumbura,
where an AFP journalist saw 27 bodies covered in white sheeting.
Nizigama,
touring the disaster zone with other ministers, promised food aid to those who
lost their homes and said the government would bear the cost of burying
relatives and would provide new housing.
Torrential
rain fell solidly for 10 hours overnight, causing power cuts in whole areas of
the city which lies on the northeastern shore of Lake Tanganyika.
The road
leading out of the capital to neighbouring Rwanda was blocked because of a
landslide while a bridge was washed away on the road to the Democratic Republic
of Congo.



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