Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




SHAKE AND BLOW
Mozambique flood toll rises to 40
by Staff Writers
Chokwe, Mozambique (AFP) Jan 27, 2013


The death toll from flooding in Mozambique climbed to around 40 on Sunday after four more bodies were discovered in the worst-hit southern town of Chokwe, while the number of people forced to flee has topped 100,000.

"They found four bodies in the last 24 hours," the town's mayor Jorge Makwakwa told AFP, adding that Chokwe's flood-ravaged streets were littered with rotting animal carcasses.

"I am mobilising workers to remove the bodies but we need masks and gloves," he said.

According to a toll from the United Nations on Friday, the severe flooding in the impoverished country had killed at least 36 people, most in the southern province of Gaza.

The floods, which have also hit neighbouring South Africa and Zimbabwe, are the result of days of torrential rains this month that swelled the Limpopo river.

The UN children's agency UNICEF said Sunday that the number of people forced to flee their homes in the Limpopo valley had reached 108,000.

About 23,000 families have sought shelter in camps in Gaza, and the UN World Food Programme has begun feeding some 75,000 flood-affected people, according to the United Nations.

UNICEF said it had set up three field hospitals and was broadcasting radio messages urging locals to take basic hygiene measures to ward off diarrhoea and cholera.

While the Limpopo river started to recede in Chokwe on Sunday, the 9,000 residents who had stayed behind were in urgent need of clean water and food, mayor Makwakwa said, as a major clean-up operation got under way.

While some tried to salvage what they could and laid their possessions out to dry, others walked through the streets inebriated, having helped themselves to alcohol in flood-damaged stores, an AFP reporter on the scene said.

With relief efforts focused on the camps, some locals said they were struggling to get their hands on emergency supplies.

In the village of Guija, children told AFP they had had no water or food since Wednesday, while a doctor said two mothers had given birth on rooftops after they were marooned by the rising waters.

Mozambican authorities were also scrambling to protect the partly inundated coastal tourist city of Xai-Xai on the Limpopo river, where some 45,000 people were thought to be at risk from the deluge, Rita Almeida, a spokeswoman for Mozambique's Disaster Relief Management Institute, told AFP.

She added that helicopters would be dispatched to try to rescue those stranded by the floodwaters.

"Our biggest priority is to reach the people (who have taken refuge) in trees," she said.

.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SHAKE AND BLOW
Mozambique floods prompt humanitarian crisis
Chiaquelane, Mozambique (AFP) Jan 25, 2013
Tens of thousands of Mozambicans are stranded without food and water after floods swept through the south of the country this week, sparking a large-scale humanitarian crisis. With the displaced now living in the open and eating grasshoppers to survive, the Mozambican government and international agencies like the Red Cross are warning of a looming catastrophe. When the floods came on We ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Wind in the willows boosts biofuel production

Fuel Choices and How They Affect Car Insurance

US Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack visits Renmatix for commissioning of plant to sugar BioFlex Conversion Unit

Photovoltaics beat biofuels at converting sun's energy to miles driven

SHAKE AND BLOW
Robofish Grace glides with the greatest of ease

Nexter joins robot development business

Game on: European student codes reach ISS

Robot Spheres in zero-gravity action

SHAKE AND BLOW
Japan plans world's largest wind farm

China revs up wind power amid challenges

Algonquin Power Buys 109 MW Shady Oaks Wind Power Facility

British group pans wind farm compensation

SHAKE AND BLOW
Toyota, Nissan announce record sales for 2012

Caterpillar's China woes warn foreign investors

New car mirror avoids 'blind spot'

Volvo set to be world leader in heavy trucks after China merger

SHAKE AND BLOW
Iraq inks oil exploration deal with Kuwait Energy

Baghdad repeats Exxon ultimatum: Kurdistan or south Iraq

Lebanon's feuds 'could spark gas conflict'

Aquino alleges China harassed Philippines boats

SHAKE AND BLOW
French government backs ex-Areva boss to head EADS: report

Bulgaria nuclear referendum set to fail

Bulgarian nuclear referendum on track to fail

France names ex-Areva boss to EADS board

SHAKE AND BLOW
Latest Ways to Make Your Business Energy Efficient

China coal plant shut by health chiefs

Keeping the lights on with renewables

Czech PM slams Albania grid decision

SHAKE AND BLOW
Brazil to inventory Amazon rainforest trees

Civilians fell rare Syrian trees for firewood

Prosecutors take issue with Brazil's new forestry code

Climate change's effects on temperate rain forests surprisingly complex




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement