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At Least Five Dead In South Africa Floods, Mudslides

    Advertisement At least five people have been killed in floods and mudslides across South Africa’s port city of Durban following heavy rains in … Continue reading At Least Five Dead In South Africa Floods, Mudslides


A general view of a flooded street following heavy rains in Pinetown, near Durban, on April 12, 2022. At least five people have been killed in floods and mudslides across South Africa’s port city of Durban following heavy rains in recent days. Days of rains have flooded several areas and shut dozens of roads across the city PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP
A general view of a flooded street following heavy rains in Pinetown, near Durban, on April 12, 2022. At least five people have been killed in floods and mudslides across South Africa’s port city of Durban following heavy rains in recent days.
Days of rains have flooded several areas and shut dozens of roads across the city
PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP

 

 

At least five people have been killed in floods and mudslides across South Africa’s port city of Durban following heavy rains in recent days, authorities said on Tuesday.

Days of rains have flooded several areas and shut dozens of roads across the city, which is popular for its idyllic beaches.

“Five deaths have been reported so far (but) we are still busy gathering information from the emergency services,” Lungi Mtshali, spokesman for the Cooperative Governance ministry, told AFP.

Video footage shared by private rescue workers and paramedics shows flooded city highways, submerged cars and collapsed houses.

The risk management department in the southeastern province of KwaZulu-Natal, of which Durban is the largest city, urged people to stay at home and ordered those residing in low-lying areas to move to higher ground.

Rescue operations are underway to evacuate people in areas that have “experienced mudslides, flooding and structural collapses of buildings and roads”, the department said.

“It’s an absolute nightmare. Plenty of mudslides, people passing (dying), buildings collapsed,” Garrith Jamieson, director of Durban-based ALS Paramedics services told AFP. He predicted there would be “more fatalities”.

Local media are reporting between 11 and 20 people dead but these figures have not yet been confirmed.