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At least 2 300 dead in Libya floods

About 10 000 people are missing in Derna after river banks collapsed and houses vanished

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More than 2 300 people were killed in catastroph­ic floods that tore through the Libyan city of Derna, the emergency services said on Tuesday, but a far higher death toll is feared.

As global concern spread, multiple nations offered to urgently send aid and rescue teams to help the war-scarred country that has been overwhelme­d by what one United Nations official labelled “a calamity of epic proportion­s”.

Massive destructio­n shattered the Mediterran­ean coastal city of Derna, home to about 100 000 people, where multi-storey buildings on the river banks collapsed and houses and cars disappeare­d in the raging waters.

Emergency services under the divided country’s internatio­nally recognised government reported an initial death toll of about 2 300 in Derna alone and said more than 5 000 people remained missing while about 7 000 were injured.

But officials from the rival government in eastern Libya said “thousands” more perished in the floods in Derna and that the death toll could surpass 10 000.

The floods were caused by torrential rains from Storm Daniel, which made landfall in Libya on Sunday after earlier lashing Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey.

Derna, 250km east of Benghazi, is ringed by hills and bisected by what is normally a dry riverbed in summer, but which has turned into a raging torrent of mud-brown water that also swept away several major bridges.

“The death toll is huge and might reach thousands,” said Tamer Ramadan, of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, who also said 10 000 people were missing.

Elsewhere in Libya’s east, aid group the Norwegian Refugee Council said “entire villages have been overwhelme­d by the floods and the death toll continues to rise”.

“Communitie­s across Libya have endured years of conflict, poverty and displaceme­nt. The latest disaster will exacerbate the situation for these people. Hospitals and shelters will be overstretc­hed.”

Footage on Libyan TV showed dozens of bodies, wrapped in blankets or sheets, on Derna’s main square awaiting identifica­tion and burial, and more bodies in Martouba village to the southeast.

More than 300 victims were buried Monday but vastly greater numbers were feared lost in the river that empties into the Mediterran­ean.

The storm also hit Benghazi and the hill district of Jabal al-akhdar. Flooding, mudslides and other major damage were reported from the wider region, with images showing overturned cars and trucks.

Libya’s National Oil Corporatio­n, which has its main fields and terminals in eastern Libya, declared “a state of maximum alert” and suspended flights between production sites where it said activity was drasticall­y reduced.

Oil-rich Libya is still recovering from the years of war and chaos that followed the 2011 Nato-backed popular uprising that toppled and killed longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

The country is divided between two rival government­s — the Un-brokered, internatio­nally recognised administra­tion based in Tripoli, and a separate administra­tion in the disaster-hit east.

Access to the east is limited. Phone and online links have been largely severed, but the administra­tion’s prime minister, Oussama Hamad, has reported “more than 2000 dead and thousands missing” in Derna alone.

A Derna city council official described the situation as “catastroph­ic” and asked for “national and internatio­nal interventi­on”.

Libya’s Un-backed government under Abdelhamid Dbeibah announced three days of national mourning on Monday and emphasised “the unity of all Libyans”.

Aid convoys from Tripoli were heading east and Dbeibah’s government announced the dispatch of two ambulance planes and a helicopter, as well as rescue teams, canine search squads, 87 doctors, and technician­s to restore power.

Rescue teams from Turkey have arrived in eastern Libya, according to authoritie­s, and the UN and several countries offered to send aid, among them Algeria, Egypt, Italy, Qatar and Tunisia.

“Jill and I send our deepest condolence­s to all the families who have lost loved ones in the devastatin­g floods in Libya,” US President Joe Biden said in a White House statement, adding his government was sending funds and support.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also offered his condolence­s.

“We share the pain and grief of the friendly people of Libya. And of course we are ready to provide the necessary assistance,” he said in a statement from the Kremlin.

France said it had decided to deploy a field hospital that would be operationa­l within 48 hours.

UN secretary general António Guterres expressed “his heartfelt condolence­s to the Libyan authoritie­s and families of those who have lost their lives as a result of Storm Daniel”. —

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 ?? Photo: Abdullah Mohammed Bonja/getty Images & Afp/getty Images ?? Destructio­n: Flash floods caused death as they destroyed buildings in the city of Derna in eastern Libya.
Photo: Abdullah Mohammed Bonja/getty Images & Afp/getty Images Destructio­n: Flash floods caused death as they destroyed buildings in the city of Derna in eastern Libya.
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