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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Brazil flood deaths top 800 with 400 still missing

BBC News, 23 January 2011

Officials in Brazil say more than 800 people are now known to have died in floods and landslides in the south-east of the country this month.

Buildings were swept away by the force of the
water and mud coming down sodden hillsides
More than 400 people are still missing after torrential rain caused whole hillsides to collapse.

The Brazilian government has said it will set up an early warning system to alert communities of impending danger.

The flooding is considered the worst natural disaster Brazil has ever experienced.

According to figures compiled by the newspaper O Globo, a third of all victims were under age.

The youngest fatality was a five-day-old baby buried in a mudslide in Nova Friburgo, the worst affected town with 324 dead.

Continuing danger

The number of missing has been declining as forensic experts identify more bodies, but rescue workers fear the full extent of the disaster is not yet known, with some remote communities still only reachable by helicopter.

Related stories

Emergency workers say their priority is to make sure no new deaths occur.

They are warning of the risks of contaminated water.

Funeral workers said some dogs were
guarding their owners' graves for days
Three people are known to have contracted leptospirosis, an infectious bacterial disease, which is caused by exposure to water contaminated with rats' urine.

In Teresopolis, doctors have been administering thousands of tetanus vaccines.

In Sao Jose do Vale, workers were erecting more than a hundred tents sent from the UK to house those whose homes were swept away or flooded.

Volunteers in Rio de Janeiro held an adoption fair in the hope of re-homing some of the 5,000 animals left without owners as a result of the disaster.

The government has allocated $240m (£150m) in emergency reconstruction money for the area.


Related Article:

An amazing image out of the disaster in Brazil: Cristina Maria
Cesario Santana’s dog Leao has spent the past two days sitting vigil
at her owner’s grave site following her death in last week’s landslides
and floods.
(Vanderlei Almeida/AFP/Getty Images)


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