Premium
This is an archive article published on January 13, 2011

Hundreds killed in Brazil floods,mudslides

Devastating mudslides and floods have killed nearly 270 people near Rio de Janeiro.

Devastating mudslides and floods have killed nearly 270 people in the mountainous area near Rio de Janeiro,Brazilian officials said,warning that the death toll was likely to rise.

Rescue operations in the area north of Rio known as the Serrana were suspended late yesterday because of darkness and dangerous conditions.

Entire neighbourhoods in the municipalities of Nova Friburgo,Teresopolis and Petropolis were swept away by rivers of mud and tumbling rocks.

Story continues below this ad

At least three firemen were killed when they were engulfed in tons of mud as they tried to carry a rescue.

The full extent of the devastation however was unknown because communication and access to the stricken zone was made difficult after roads and bridges were destroyed,and telephone service was cut in some areas.

Officials said the disaster was the worst ever to befall the Serrana,a soaring,lush area that used to be a getaway for 19th-century Brazilian nobility and which is now a tourist spot especially for Rio residents during the current southern hemisphere summer.

“It’s a huge catastrophe,a major disaster,” the mayor of the worst-hit town of Teresopolis,Jorge Mario Sedlacek,told the GloboNews television station.

Story continues below this ad

His town counted at least 130 deaths,according to information released by area firefighters late yesterday.

Rio state deputy governor Luiz Fernando Pezao told the G1 news website that another 107 people died in nearby Nova Friburgo,including the firemen killed.

Petropolis,in the same region,suffered at least 30 deaths,most in the nearby district of Itaipava,though officials warned that the toll was expected to rise when rescue workers reach remote hamlets.

The yesterday death toll reached at least 267,not including at least 13 people killed earlier in the week by the same storm in Sao Paulo.

Story continues below this ad

At least as much rain water as the region usually sees in two or three weeks hit the Serrana before dawn yesterday,as residents were sleeping in their homes.

The downpour triggered mudslides and caused rivers to overflow,carrying away cars,homes and people.

Meteorologists blamed the extraordinary precipitation on a cold front that intensified the already heavy wet season southeast Brazil experiences every summer.

That cold front moved through Sao Paulo early in the week before moving on to Rio de Janeiro state.

More rain was forecast in the coming days.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement