Houston Chronicle

As Sierra Leone buries dead, flooding a threat

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FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — The president joined with families in paying final respects Thursday to victims of this week’s mudslides and flooding in Sierra Leone’s capital, while the government warned residents to evacuate a mountainsi­de where a large crack opened.

Approximat­ely 350 people had been confirmed killed and 600 more remained missing from the disaster early Monday. Workers struggled in the thick mud and debris of smashed homes looking for more bodies, picking their way through stools, shoes and other remnants of daily life.

The government hired 600 grave diggers for individual burials taking place in a cemetery that already holds victims of the 2014-15 Ebola outbreak that killed thousands in the West African nation.

“We all share the agony which has befallen the nation,” President Ernest Bai Koroma told mourners at the cemetery.

“They had their hopes and aspiration­s, a bright future — like the six innocent children who went to study in the home of one of their brightest colleagues, like the young man who was due to get married tomorrow, like the husband who has worked so hard to get his family a new home and had just moved them to this new and lovely home,” he said.

Dr. Owiss Koroma, the government’s chief pathologis­t, said the confirmed death toll from the mudslide and flooding was at least 350, a third of them children. The bodies of many victims were too mangled and decomposed to be identified.

“I lost my sister and mother. The water took away my mother and sister and they have buried them today. That’s why we are here, to mourn and go back home,” said Zainab Kargbo, who was among those at the cemetery.

Thousands lost their homes in poor, low-lying areas of Freetown and surroundin­g communitie­s.

With more rain forecast for the coming week, further mudslides were a threat. The Office of National Security warned people of the danger from the newly opened crack on the side of a mountain and urged residents to evacuate.

The main focus is getting people away from areas still under threat, said Zuliatu Cooper, the deputy minister of health and sanitation.

“The rains are still pending and there is a possibilit­y that we will have another incident,” he said. “We would rather have structures falling down without people in them.”

 ?? Mohamed Saidu / AFP / Getty Images ?? Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma, left, and Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf lay wreaths for the victims of mudslides that killed about 350.
Mohamed Saidu / AFP / Getty Images Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma, left, and Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf lay wreaths for the victims of mudslides that killed about 350.

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