China Daily

500 dead in Sierra Leone mudslides

- VIA AP

landslide which has claimed nearly 500 lives.

FREETOWN — The number of bodies recovered after a mudslide and flooding hit Sierra Leone last week has reached 499, Sierra Leonean media reported on Sunday.

Authoritie­s this week buried 461 bodies in quickly-dug graves in the nearby Waterloo cemetery, near the site of a mass burial for victims of the Ebola crisis that killed 4,000 people in the former British colony between 2014 and 2016. Thirty-eight more bodies were found on Sunday.

The Red Cross said on Friday that more than 600 are still missing.

A hillside collapsed in heavy rains in the early hours of Aug 14, killing residents and destroying homes near or on the outskirts of Freetown and leaving more than 2,000 others homeless.

President Ernest Bai Koroma on Aug 15 declared seven days of mourning across the country with immediate effect.

Humanitari­an aid is coming Saidu Kanu, country director for World Hope Internatio­nal in Sierra Leone in from countries including China, Morocco, Ghana and the United Arab Emirates for people affected by the disaster.

According to the local Chinese embassy, in addition to donations from local Chinese companies and organizati­ons, the Chinese government had decided to provide $1 million in emergency humanitari­an aid to the Sierra Leonean government.

Meanwhile, the medical aid team of Chinese People’s Liberation Army has been participat­ing in disaster relief through the coordinati­on of the joint medical unit set up by Sierra Leone’s armed forces.

The team has treated more than 70 people hit by the disaster, team leader Guo Xuejun said on Sunday.

Infectious diseases

Sierra Leone is a country with high incidence of infectious diseases, and has registered many cases of malaria and intestinal diseases.

The crowdednes­s at the settlement for disaster-affected residents and the hot and humid environmen­t could increase the possibilit­y of an epidemic outbreak, which usually comes with a largescale disaster, Guo said.

In order to help forestall such a situation, the team sterilized the peripheral of the settlement and sprayed insecticid­e to prevent the breeding of vector species. Medical experts also provided medical services to the victims by instructin­g them how to prevent infectious diseases.

Other groups are also providing clean water as a health crisis looms.

“Water sources have been contaminat­ed” and officials “fear for an outbreak of waterborne diseases”, said Saidu Kanu, country director for World Hope Internatio­nal.

Moroccan King Mohammed VI has ordered sending humanitari­an aid to Sierra Leone. The aid consisted of 60 tons of food, tents, and medicines for cholera.

Ghana has also mobilized relief items valued at $1 million for disaster victims in Sierra Leone.

The UAE offered emergency relief worth $100,000 to the West African country.

Water sources have been contaminat­ed (and officials) fear for an outbreak of waterborne diseases.”

“Let’s be clear. There will be no security cooperatio­n nor opening of embassies or even a role for some countries that say that they want to play a role in ending the crisis in Syria before they clearly and frankly cut their relations with terrorism,” Assad said. “At that point maybe we can speak about opening embassies.”

Following months of steady military advances, Syria’s government is looking ahead to reconstruc­tion.

Assad said his country’s economy is turning to growth again “at a very slow pace, although we are under an almost complete embargo”.

The government had billed the internatio­nal trade fair, which opened three days ago, as a “victory” and a sign of renewed confidence in the war-torn nation.

The full-fledged Syrian civil war has since killed an estimated 400,000 people and displaced half the country’s population.

Many Western and Arab countries have called on Assad to step down and both the US and the European Union have imposed sanctions on the government. Several Arab and Western countries also withdrew their diplomats from Damascus.

But after the IS group declared a caliphate in large parts of Syria and Iraq, the internatio­nal focus turned to crushing the extremists.

On Monday, Russia’s air force destroyed a large column of IS fighters on their way to the Syrian city of Deir al-Zor, killing more than 200 militants, Moscow said.

 ?? SEYLLOU / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Chinese doctors provide medical attention to flood victims on Friday in Freetown, Sierra Leone, following heavy rains and a devastatin­g
SEYLLOU / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Chinese doctors provide medical attention to flood victims on Friday in Freetown, Sierra Leone, following heavy rains and a devastatin­g
 ?? SYRIAN PRESIDENCY FACEBOOK PAGE ?? Syrian President Bashar al-Assad speaks to diplomats in Damascus on Sunday.
SYRIAN PRESIDENCY FACEBOOK PAGE Syrian President Bashar al-Assad speaks to diplomats in Damascus on Sunday.

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