The Scotsman

Search continues for survivors as 200 die in Colombian floods

● Rescue bid halted overnight ● City’s power and water supply hit

- By CHRISTINE ARMARIO IN BOGATA

A grim search for the missing resumed at dawn yesterday in southern Colombia after surging rivers sent an avalanche of floodwater­s, mud and debris through a small city, killing at least 200 people and leaving many more injured and homeless.

Rescuers pried through piles of rocks and wooden planks that entombed homes. Streets were covered in thick sand, mud and tree limbs from the rivers and rainforest that surround the city. There was little drinking water and no power, which forced authoritie­s to suspend the search and rescue effort during the night.

The National Disaster Agency said that the death toll was at 200, with another 200 injured, but authoritie­s conceded it could easily go highthroug­h er because many people were still unaccounte­d for and dozens were airlifted to hospitals in other cities and were in critical condition. Bodies were being placed in a temporary morgue where three teams of medical examiners were working around the clock to swiftly identify the remains.

Authoritie­s and residents in the city tucked between mountains along Colombia’s southern border spent Saturday tending to victims, trying to find homes on streets reduced to masses of rubble and engaged in a desperate search to locate loved ones who disappeare­d in the dark of night. Authoritie­s expect the death toll to rise.

Eduardo Vargas, 29, was asleep with his wife and sevenmonth-old baby when he was awoken by the sound of neighbours banging on his door. He quickly grabbed his family and fled up a small mountain amid the cries of people in panic.

“There was no time for anything,” he said.

Mr Vargas and his family huddled with about two dozen other residents as rocks, trees and wooden planks ripped their neighbourh­ood. They waited there until daylight, when members of the military helped them down.

When he reached the site of his home on Saturday, nothing his family left behind remained.

“Thank God we have our lives,” he said.

President Juan Manuel Santos travelled to Mocoa shortly after the disaster occurred and declared the city a disaster zone. The Air Force transporte­d 19 patients to a city farther north and said 20 more would be evacuated soon. Medicine and surgical supplies were being sent to the city as the area’s regional hospital struggled to cope with the magnitude of the crisis. Herman Granados, an anesthesio­logist, said he worked throughout the night. He said the hospital did not have a blood bank large enough to deal with the number of patients and was quickly running out of its supply.

Some of the hospital workers came to help even though their own relatives remained missing.

“Under the mud,” Mr Granados said, “I am sure there are many more.”

Mr Santos blamed climate change for triggering the avalanche, saying that the accumulate­d rainfall in one night was almost half the amount Mocoa normally receives in the entire month of March. With the rainy season in much of Colombia just beginning, he said local and national authoritie­s need to redouble their efforts to prevent a similar tragedy.

The crisis is likely to be remembered as one of the worst natural disasters in recent Colombian history, though the Andean nation has experience­d even more destructiv­e environmen­tal catastroph­es. Nearly 25,000 people were killed in 1985 after the Nevado del Ruiz volcano erupted and triggered a deluge of mud and debris that buried the town of Armero.

Oscar Londono tried throughout the night to reach his wife’s parents who he found camping with other survivors. “

 ??  ?? 0 Rescuers dig for survivors among the rubble left by mudslides following heavy rains in the city of Mocoa, Colombia
PICTURE: GETTY
0 Rescuers dig for survivors among the rubble left by mudslides following heavy rains in the city of Mocoa, Colombia PICTURE: GETTY
 ??  ?? 0 A man surveys the damage after returning to Mocoa
0 A man surveys the damage after returning to Mocoa

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