Yahoo – AFP,
Saidu Bah, August 14, 2017
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| Residents struggled to traverse roads that were turned into churning rivers of mud after Sierra Leone's capital of Freetown was struck by heavy rains (AFP Photo/STR) |
Freetown
(AFP) - At least 312 people were killed and more than 2,000 left homeless on
Monday when heavy flooding hit Sierra Leone's capital of Freetown, leaving
excavators to pull bodies from rubble and overwhelming the city's morgues.
An AFP
journalist saw several homes submerged in Regent village, a hilltop community,
and corpses floating in the water in the Lumley West area of the city, as the
government held an emergency meeting to plan its response to one of the worst
natural disasters ever to hit the city.
Red Cross
spokesman Patrick Massaquoi told AFP the death toll was 312 but could rise
further as his team continued to survey disaster areas in Freetown and tally
the number of dead.
Sierra
Leone is one of the poorest countries in the world, according to UN indicators.
"I
counted over 300 bodies and more are coming," Mohamed Sinneh, a morgue
technician at Freetown's Connaught Hospital, told AFP, having earlier described
an "overwhelming number of dead" at the facility leaving no space to
lay out every body.
Many more
of the dead were taken to private morgues, Sinneh said.
Sierra
Leone's military, police and Red Cross volunteers were meanwhile deployed in an
all out effort to locate and rescue citizens trapped in their homes or under
rubble.
Images
obtained by AFP showed ferocious, churning dark-orange mud coursing down a
steep street in the capital, while videos posted by local residents showed
people waist- or chest-deep in water trying to cross the road.
The Sierra
Leone meteorological department did not issue any warning ahead of the
torrential rains to hasten evacuation from the disaster zones, AFP's
correspondent based in Freetown said.
'Lost
everything'
Fatmata
Sesay, who lives on the hilltop area of Juba, said she, her three children and
husband were awoken at 4:30 am by rain pounding on the mud house they occupy,
which was by then submerged by water.
"I
only managed to escape by climbing to the roof of the house when neighbours
came in to rescue me," she said.
"We
have lost everything and we do not have a place to sleep," she told AFP in
tears.
Deputy
Information Minister Cornelius Deveaux confirmed President Ernest Bai Koroma
had called a national emergency, and said his own boss, Information Minister
Mohamed Bangura, was in hospital after being injured in the flooding.
Deveaux
said "hundreds" of people had lost their lives and had properties
damaged, and promised food and other assistance for the victims.
He called
on the public to remain calm with rescue efforts underway.
Piles of
corpses
The scale
of the human cost of the floods was only becoming clear on Monday afternoon, as
images of battered corpses piled on top of each other circulated and residents
spoke of their struggles to cope with the destruction and find their loved
ones.
Meanwhile
disaster management official Vandy Rogers said that "over 2,000 people are
homeless," hinting at the huge humanitarian effort that will be required
to deal with the fallout of the flooding in one of Africa's poorest nations.
Freetown,
an overcrowded coastal city of 1.2 million, is hit each year by flooding during
several months of rain that destroys makeshift settlements and raises the risk
of waterborne diseases such as cholera.
Sasha
Ekanayake, Save the Children's Sierra Leone Country Director, said the
immediate priority was to provide shelter and protect residents, especially
children, from the spread of deadly waterborne diseases.
"We
are still in the rainy season and must be prepared to respond in the event of
further emergencies to come," she said in a statement.
Flooding in
the capital in 2015 killed 10 people and left thousands homeless.
Sierra
Leone was one of the west African nations hit by an outbreak of the Ebola virus
in 2014 that left more than 4,000 people dead in the country, and it has
struggled to revive its economy since the crisis.
About 60
percent of people in Sierra Leone live below the national poverty line,
according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
The country
ranked 179th out of 188 countries on the UNDP's 2016 Human Development Index, a
basket of data combining life expectancy, education and income and other
factors.
#UPDATE At least 312 people killed as heavy flooding hits #SierraLeone capital Freetown https://t.co/NReFNM6LPY pic.twitter.com/xntBQIh7lk— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 14, 2017


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