Hundreds dead as flooding swamps Sierra Leone capital

AFP
At least 312 people were killed and more than 2,000 left homeless yesterday when heavy flooding hit Sierra Leone’s capital of Freetown.
AFP
Hundreds dead as flooding swamps Sierra Leone capital
AFP

Flooded streets are seen in the Regent area of Sierra Leone’s capital of Freetown. The death toll from massive flooding in the city was put at 312 yesterday but the local Red Cross said it could rise as it surveyed areas where rain had caused homes to disappear under water.

At least 312 people were killed and more than 2,000 left homeless yesterday when heavy flooding hit Sierra Leone’s capital of Freetown, leaving morgues overflowing and residents desperately searching for loved ones.

A journalist at the scene saw bodies being carried away and houses submerged in two areas of the city, where roads turned into churning rivers of mud and corpses were washed up on the streets.

Red Cross spokesman Patrick Massaquoi told reporters the death toll could rise further as his team continued to survey disaster areas in Freetown and tally the number of dead.

Mohamed Sinneh, a morgue technician at Freetown’s Connaught Hospital, said 180 bodies had been received so far at his facility alone, many of them children, leaving no space for what he described as the “overwhelming number of dead.”

Many more bodies were taken to private morgues, Sinneh said.

Images showed a ferocious churning of dark orange mud coursing down a steep street in the capital, while videos posted by local residents showed people waist and chest deep in water trying to cross the road.

Other images showed battered corpses piled on top of each other.

Fatmata Sesay, who lives on the hilltop area of Juba, said she, her three children and husband were woken at 4:30am by rain beating down on their mud house, which was by then submerged by water.

She managed to escape by climbing onto the roof.

“We have lost everything and we do not have a place to sleep,” she said.

Local media reports said a section of a hill in the Regent area of the city had partially collapsed. 

Meanwhile disaster management official Candy Rogers said “over 2,000 people are homeless,” hinting at the huge humanitarian effort that will be required to deal with the fallout of the flooding in one of Africa’s poorest nations.

Freetown, an overcrowded coastal city of 1.2 million, is hit each year by flooding during several months of rain that destroys makeshift settlements and raises the risk of waterborne diseases such as cholera.

Flooding in the capital in 2015 killed 10 people and left thousands homeless.

Sierra Leone was one of the west African nations hit by an outbreak of the Ebola virus in 2014 that left more than 4,000 people dead in the country, and it has struggled to revive its economy ever since that crisis.

About 60 percent of people in Sierra Leone live below the national poverty line, according to the United Nations Development Program.


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