Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. African flooding leaves 259 dead

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JOHANNESBU­RG — Flooding in South Africa’s Durban area has taken at least 259 lives and is a “catastroph­e of enormous proportion­s,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said Wednesday.

“This disaster is part of climate change. It is telling us that climate change is serious, it is here,” said Ramaphosa, visiting flooded areas of Durban and the surroundin­g eThekwini metropolit­an area.

“We no longer can postpone what we need to do, and the measures we need to take to deal with climate change,” he said.

The death toll is expected to continue rising as search and rescue operations continue in KwaZulu-Natal province, officials said. The province is about to be declared a disaster area by the national government, said Ramaphosa.

“KwaZulu-Natal is going to be declared a provincial area of disaster, so that we are able to do things quickly. The bridges have collapsed, the roads have collapsed, people have died and people are injured,” said Ramaphosa.

He said one family had lost 10 members in the devastatin­g floods.

Residents have had to flee their homes as they were swept away, buildings collapsed and road infrastruc­ture severely damaged. Durban port was flooded and shipping containers were swept away into a jumbled heap.

Authoritie­s were also seeking to restore electricit­y to large parts of the province after heavy flooding at various power stations.

Rescue efforts by the South African National Defense Force were delayed as the military’s air wing was also affected by the floods, Gen. Rudzani Maphwanya said. The military was able to deploy personnel and helicopter­s around the province on Wednesday, he said.

 ?? (AP/Str) ?? Shipping containers are left in a jumbled pile by Wednesday floods in Durban, South Africa.
(AP/Str) Shipping containers are left in a jumbled pile by Wednesday floods in Durban, South Africa.

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