Bangkok Post

Ten killed by torrential rains in Southeast

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BRASILIA: Torrential rain in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais killed 10 people in two days, according to an official report on Tuesday, which warned of more intense downpours in the region.

The victims, among them an 11-yearold girl, died on Sunday and Monday due to rains, flooding, and landslides, according to the State Coordinato­r of Civil Defence.

Since the rains began at the beginning of October, 19 people have died in the southeaste­rn Brazilian state. Ten more were killed on Saturday when a large rock fragment broke free of a ravine and plunged onto four tourist boats in Furnas Lake.

Current counts say 17,237 people have had to abandon their homes or seek refuge because of the storms.

“January has been very difficult for Minas Gerais because of the quantity, and even more so the concentrat­ion, of rain in a short amount of time,” said the state’s vice-governor, Paulo Brant, in a video published on Instagram.

“We should not curse the rain or blame nature. To a large extent the effects are due to past mistakes like the disorderly expansion of cities, and the sedimentat­ion and pollution of rivers,” he said.

A mining dam overflowed on Saturday, disrupting traffic on a major highway for two days.

The French group Vallourec was fined around US$60 million (2 billion baht) for “environmen­tal damage” three days later, local authoritie­s announced on Tuesday.

Of the 853 municipali­ties in Minas Gerais, 145 are in a state of emergency due to extreme weather. In Juatuba, a town of 26,000 about 50 kilometres from the state capital of Belo Horizonte, Daniel Valeriano de Oliveira’s house flooded early on Sunday morning.

“We lost everything. My wife and children left the house in a boat,” the logistics operator said.

Civil Defence warned that conditions on Tuesday in Minas Gerais would include “moderate to heavy rain that may be accompanie­d by electric shocks”.

Experts attribute the emergency to the South Atlantic Convergenc­e Zone, a typical summer phenomenon that each year causes heavy rainfall in the area, in addition to La Nina — a climate pattern in the Pacific Ocean that can affect weather worldwide.

For two months, Brazil has suffered extensive damage due to the floods, which have killed dozens and displaced thousands.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Water flows at the Carioca dam after heavy rains in Para de Minas, in Minas Gerais state, Brazil on Tuesday.
REUTERS Water flows at the Carioca dam after heavy rains in Para de Minas, in Minas Gerais state, Brazil on Tuesday.

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