San Francisco Chronicle

Hundreds die, 600 missing in flood, mudslides

- By Jaime Yaya Barry and Dionne Searcey

DAKAR, Senegal — The bodies floated down the streets and piled up at the morgue, where the coroners struggled to find room for all of the dead.

An already devastatin­g flood the day before produced even more anguish on Tuesday in Sierra Leone as residents of Freetown, the capital, dug through the mud in search of missing family members.

The Red Cross said hundreds of people had been killed and 600 were missing after torrential rains early Monday caused mudslides and transforme­d city streets into fastmoving rivers of muddy water, washing away everything in their path.

One worker at the city’s morgue, who was not authorized to speak to reporters, said he had seen as many as 400 bodies there.

Residents of the poor communitie­s built into the capital city’s unstable hillsides suffered the most. Their homes — shacks, really — were quickly buried or violently swept away in the deluge. Aid groups estimated that 3,000 people had been left homeless.

On Tuesday, Save the Children, an aid organizati­on, said that one of its staff members and his young children were among the hundreds missing. Many were thought to be entombed under tons of mud.

President Ernest Bai Koroma said in a televised address to the nation that he was “very disturbed by this national tragedy,” and promised to create an emergency response center in Regent, a neighborho­od where dozens of people were thought to be trapped inside homes buried under soaked earth cleaved from the hillside.

“Let me assure you that my government is fully engaged on this situation,” the president said, advising people to remain calm and avoid areas still vulnerable to slides.

Despite the president’s pledge, it was clear that rescue and cleanup efforts would take time. Recovery teams lacked the appropriat­e equipment to dig through the extensive mud and debris. Phone and power outages spread across the city, and some roads were impassable. Homes that were still standing were caked in mud and coated with debris.

“We are also fearful of outbreaks of diseases such as cholera and typhoid,” Abu Bakarr Tarawallie, a spokesman for the Sierra Leone Red Cross Society, told Reuters. “We can only hope that this does not happen.”

The Freetown morgue had reached capacity on Monday, but bodies kept arriving on Tuesday. They were stacked outside, where residents gathered to try to identify missing family members.

The stench was overwhelmi­ng. Mohamed Koroma, a university student in Freetown who visited the morgue on Tuesday, said people had to cover their faces with masks. Jaime Yaya Barry and Dionne Searcey are New York Times writers.

 ?? Manika Kamara / Associated Press ?? People search for bodies in the rubble after heavy rains caused flooding and mudslides in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Homes in the area were quickly buried or swept away in the deluge.
Manika Kamara / Associated Press People search for bodies in the rubble after heavy rains caused flooding and mudslides in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Homes in the area were quickly buried or swept away in the deluge.

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