Floods in Brazil | Race against time to rescue victims

(Porto Alegre) A race against time began on Sunday in the south of Brazil to deal with the monster floods which devastated the state of Rio Grande do Sul, causing the death of around sixty people and driving 70 from their homes. 000 more.


From the waterlogged streets or from the sky, the scale of the disaster is striking: houses whose roofs can barely be seen, residents who lost everything in a few minutes and the center of Porto Alegre, the modern capital of the state where 1.4 million people live, completely flooded.

According to the municipality, the Guaiba River which crosses the city has reached a record level of 5.09 meters, well beyond the historic peak of 4.76 m recorded during the floods of 1941.

The water continues to advance in the metropolis and around a hundred other localities, with ever more dramatic consequences.

PHOTO CARLOS FABAL, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Aerial view of Porto Alegre

In addition to the approximately 70,000 people evacuated from their homes, more than a million homes are deprived of water and the scale of the destruction is currently incalculable, according to Civil Defense. In total, half a million people were directly affected by the disaster and at least 74 people are missing.

Rosana Custodio, a 37-year-old nurse who had to flee her home in Porto Alegre, “lost everything”. “Thursday around midnight, the waters started to rise very quickly,” she told AFP via a WhatsApp message.

In a hurry, we went out in search of a safer place. But we couldn’t walk (…). My husband put our two little ones in a kayak and paddled with a bamboo pole. My son and I swam to the end of the street.

Rosana Custodio

They took refuge in his brother-in-law’s house, in Esteio, north of Porto Alegre, but the waters rose again on Friday and the tragedy repeated itself. “We were saved by a friends’ motorboat,” she says. Since then, she and her family have been sheltered but “we lost everything we had”.

Rainfall eased overnight Saturday into Sunday but is expected to persist for the next 24 to 36 hours, with authorities now warning of landslides.

PHOTO CARLOS FABAL, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

More than 70,000 people have left their homes.

“Key day”

Eduardo Leite, the state governor who described the situation as “dramatic and absolutely unprecedented,” will receive Brazilian President Lula on Sunday for the second time since the floods began. He has already called for a “Marshall Plan” to rebuild the region.

In the meantime, on the ground, the same scenes are repeated: residents taking refuge on their roofs waiting for help and small boats navigating what were streets and avenues.

PHOTO CARLOS FABAL, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Precipitation decreased overnight Saturday into Sunday but is expected to persist for the next 24 to 36 hours.

Sunday will be a “key day” for relief operations, said the presidency’s communications minister, Paulo Pimenta.

Concern is also starting to rise about the lack of food and the breakdown of production chains in this agricultural state, one of the most dynamic in Brazil and which accounts for a fifth of the country’s GDP.

Faced with the risk of shortages, the mayor of Porto Alegre, Sebastiao Melo, called on the population to ration water after the forced closure of four of the city’s six water treatment plants.

“Disastrous cocktail”

The floods have partly cut Porto Alegre off from the rest of the country. According to the traffic police, access routes from the south are cut off about 15 kilometers from the city, but it is still possible to access it from the north.

The main bus station is flooded and closed and Porto Alegre International Airport has suspended all operations since Friday for an indefinite period.

The rains are favored by “a disastrous cocktail” which mixes the El Niño meteorological phenomenon with climate change and other extreme phenomena, Brazilian climatologist Francisco Eliseu Aquino told AFP.

PHOTO ANSELMO CUNHA, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

People are evacuated from a flooded area.

Rio Grande do Sul has already been hit several times by deadly bad weather, notably in September, when 31 people died after the passage of a devastating cyclone.

According to experts, these extreme weather phenomena have increased in frequency and intensity with global warming.

Brazil experienced a historic drought last year in the north of the country and the number of forest fires reached a record from January to April.


reference: www.lapresse.ca

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