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Rio De Janeiro, Brazil (AFP) Jan 23, 2011 The official death toll from Brazil's mudslide disaster rose on Sunday to 803 as more bodies were recovered. In the worst-hit town of Nova Friburgo near Rio de Janeiro, 389 deaths were recorded, and in neighboring Teresopolis the toll rose to 324, according to the national Civil Defense agency and Department of Health. In the town of Petropolis the toll was raised to 65 dead, and 22 dead in Sumidouro. Another three bodies were uncovered in nearby towns. The previous confirmed toll from the flash floods and mudslides that struck the Serrana mountain region near Rio de Janeiro on January 12 was 759. Officials meanwhile reduced the number of people counted as missing from 430 people on Saturday to 417 as a number of people were found alive or bodies were identified. A total 13,830 people were forced to abandon their homes in the region, either because they were destroyed or deemed unsafe, according to Rio's health service. The full extent the disaster, reported to be the worst natural catastrophe in Brazil's history, was not yet known, with many people still in areas cut off from land access receiving help from helicopter crews.
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![]() ![]() Nova Friburgo, Brazil (AFP) Jan 19, 2011 Brazilian officials began Wednesday moving thousands of people out of at-risk areas near Rio in a flooding disaster that has already left at least 727 people dead. Ten teams of civil defense and environment officials were evacuating residents in outlying areas of Nova Friburgo, the hardest-hit town, said their commander, Colonel Roberto Robadey. "We are telling people in the risky houses ... read more |
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