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C.Africans watch mud homes dissolve in devastating floods
By Camille LAFFONT
Bangui, Central African Republic (AFP) Oct 29, 2019

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At least 42 perish in Cameroon landslide
Yaounde (AFP) Oct 29, 2019 - At least 42 people were killed after their houses were swept away Tuesday in a landslide caused by torrential rain in the western Cameroon city of Bafoussam, state media reported, showing images of rescuers desperately sifting through rubble for survivors.

"Searches are ongoing. We fear there are further deaths," a senior local official told AFP on condition of anonymity as nightfall neared.

A total of 42 bodies were taken to the hospital in the city, according to an official statement read on Cameroon Radio Television (CRTV).

Media reports had earlier spoken of about 30 dead, with the radio reporting that four pregnant women were among the victims.

Pictures of the tragedy in Bafouassam posted on social media showed ramshackle houses having crumbled into the ochre-coloured terrain and men clad in hard hats digging away at piles of mud in the search for survivors.

"The houses that collapsed were built on the side of a hill in a risk zone," said the local official in the West Region, of which Bafoussam is the capital, some 300 kilometres (185 miles) northwest of the capital Yaounde.

He said the landslide was caused by torrential rains that have fallen in the country over the past few days as well as the wider region, with neighbouring Central African Republic and Nigeria also seriously hit.

Cameroon President Paul Biya offered his condolences to families of the victims in a message broadcast on CRTV.

Landslides are quite exceptional in the area although further south they are less rare in the rainy season, notably in the English-speaking southwest.

It was in the southwestern coastal resort town of Limbe that five people died in a landslide following flooding in July last year.

Neighbouring Central African Republic, already mired in a brutal civil war, is reeling from 10 days of torrential rain which have plunged swathes of the country underwater, creating a new emergency in one of the world's poorest nations.

Tens of thousands of people have been left homeless after the CAR's largest river, the Oubangui, burst its banks at the height of the country's worst floods in decades which have left parts of the capital Bangui submerged, prompting authorities to warn of the risk of cholera.

Several agrarian states in another Cameroon neighbour, Nigeria, have also been hit by flooding. A torrential downpour Monday allowed dozens of inmates to escape from prison in the central state of Kogi.

The Central African Republic was already struggling with a humanitarian crisis. Then the floods came.

Ten days of torrential rain have plunged swathes of the country underwater, creating a new emergency in one of the world's poorest nations.

The country's largest river, the Oubangui, burst its banks in the deluge, leaving tens of thousands of people homeless in the worst floods in decades.

The normally busy streets in the seventh district of the capital Bangui have been submerged, with the daily racket of trade and taxis giving way to the quiet swish of canoes.

Dozens of residents perched on a small outcrop of land to look out on the devastation: drowned fields in which only the sodden tops of ruined crops can be seen above the water.

Many watched the mud walls of their homes melt away with the floodwater, leaving only barren frames.

Edouard, a fisherman, lost his house four days ago.

"I don't have the money to rebuild it," said Edouard, who has since taken refuge at a neighbour's home along with his parents.

"We need to be able to shelter families and wait for the water to go down. This is going to last at least until the end of November."

- 'Everyone suffers' -

Fishermen like Edouard have dealt with flooding before -- the Oubangui overflows every decade. Floods in 1999 caused major destruction, but locals say this time is worse, fed by exceptionally heavy and prolonged rains.

"This flooding is greater than in 1999," Central African Red Cross president Antoine Mbao-bogo told AFP. "Even in towns of the north and centre, it's raining heavily."

"Add to that the deep poverty of our compatriots."

The government has not yet given a death toll, but the Red Cross said the flooding has left at least 28,000 people homeless.

The Central African Republic has been mired in a brutal civil war since a coalition of rebel groups overthrew the government of President Francois Bozize in 2013.

The conflict has forced nearly a quarter of the country's 4.7 million people to flee their homes.

More than two-thirds of the country is controlled by militias fighting the government or each other.

The United Nations estimated in September that two thirds of the population depends on humanitarian aid to survive.

In a downstream village near the capital, around 150 residents have been forced to take refuge in a disused warehouse, with no roof other than some meagre tarpaulin, for almost a week.

"The flood destroyed all our homes. We saved the canoes and some clothes," said fisherman Jean Bosco.

"Everyone suffers because of the mosquitoes. We have nothing to eat. We men can endure it, but the children..."

- 'We lost everything' -

For some fishermen, the flood washed away their livelihoods as well as their homes.

"We lost everything. We cannot even fish -- our nets were washed away," said Fleury, a fisherman.

Red Cross's Mbao-bogo told AFP that the priority was to relocate those in need. But the country's slim resources are already stretched far too thin.

Government spokesman Ange-Maxime Kazagui called the flooding a "huge natural catastrophe".

"We don't have the infrastructure to shelter people, but we expect that NGOs will provide tents and shelters," he said.

"Drinking water is lacking. There are problems with latrines, mosquitoes, cold and the risk of epidemics such as cholera," he said in a television address.

"This situation could last and even get worse."

In the flooded neighbourhoods of Bangui, sewage has mixed with the rising water.

"In the water that passes here, there is refuse, garbage -- it may cause cholera!" Jeanne Koussa said in front of the stinking brown tide threatening her home in the seventh district.

Health Minister Pierre Somse confirmed there was a risk of cholera.

"The water is rising, hygiene devices have disappeared, people are crammed into underdeveloped sites -- it will all further aggravate the problem," he said.


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British woman among three dead in French floods: ministry
Paris (AFP) Oct 24, 2019
Three people, including a British woman, have died after several days of heavy rain sent rivers flooding over their banks across southern France, causing "significant damage," the interior ministry said Thursday. Rescue workers have carried out nearly 1,800 operations since Sunday, a ministry statement said, after eight departments were placed on high alert for flash floods. Among the victims was a 68-year-old British woman who was found by emergency workers near her home in the town of Cazouls ... read more

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