San Francisco Chronicle

Evacuees facing new threats after deadly mudslides

- By Clarence Roy-Macaulay and Lekan Oyekanmi Clarence Roy-Macaulay and Lekan Oyekanmi are Associated Press writers.

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — The government has begun burying the 350 people killed earlier this week in mudslides in Sierra Leone’s capital, and it warned Thursday of new danger from a large crack that has opened on a mountainsi­de where residents were told to evacuate.

Another 600 people remained missing from the mudslides and flooding early Monday, as workers sought to recover more bodies from the thick mud and debris of smashed homes.

The government hired 600 gravedigge­rs for the burials, which are taking place in a cemetery where victims of the 2014-15 Ebola outbreak that killed thousands in the West African nation were laid to rest.

Each person will be buried individual­ly in a dignified manner, said Cornelius Deveaux, deputy minister of informatio­n and communicat­ions.

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 the victims are children. Many of the victims were too mangled and decomposed to be identified.

Thousands have lost their homes in impoverish­ed, lowlying areas of Freetown and surroundin­g communitie­s.

With more rain forecast for the coming week, further mudslides are possible. The Office of National Security said a crack has opened on the side of a mountain where residents were told 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.”

The mudslides tore apart multistory concrete homes, with their metal reinforcem­ents tangled like threads. On the same hillsides that were stripped bare, fully intact homes stood nearby, with untouched, lush vegetation.

Grieving survivors said they were haunted by thoughts of dead relatives.

“Last night, I could not sleep,” said Tenneh Bull, who lost a daughter. “Even now I’m still thinking of her; thoughts of her death is lingering.”

Sierra Leone has pleaded for internatio­nal assistance, while Amnesty Internatio­nal issued a statement accusing the government of failing to learn from similar incidents.

“Due to a lack of regulation and insufficie­nt considerat­ion for minimum standards and environmen­tal laws, millions of Sierra Leoneans are living in dangerousl­y vulnerable homes,” said Makmid Kamara, the group’s deputy director of global issues.

 ?? Saidu Bah / AFP / Getty Images ?? Burial team members, some of the 600 the government has hired, rest outside a hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone, where 350 people died after torrential rains caused massive mudslides.
Saidu Bah / AFP / Getty Images Burial team members, some of the 600 the government has hired, rest outside a hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone, where 350 people died after torrential rains caused massive mudslides.

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