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Death toll hits 91 after deadly Brazil rains

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

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Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro sent his condolences Monday to the families of 91 people who died in torrential rains in the country’s northeast, as rescue workers continued a grim search for victims.

Releasing an updated toll, authorities said 26 people remained missing in the region around the city of Recife, where days of downpours triggered flooding and landslides that swept up virtually everything in their path.

Bolsonaro posted a video on a social media that showed him flying in a helicopter over a disaster zone where brown floodwater still inundated large areas and gashes of mud scarred hillsides where houses once stood.

The far-right president told a news conference that he tried to land, but the pilots’ recommendation was that, given the instability of the soil, they could have an accident. So they decided against it.


He recalled a string of devastating floods in Brazil that have killed hundreds of people in recent months, which experts say are being aggravated by climate change.

The government has allocated a total of one billion reais (US$210 million) in emergency and reconstruction funds, said Regional Development Minister Daniel Ferreira.

The forecast is for more rain in the coming days. They urge people to respect the alerts issued by the authorities and evacuate if necessary, the minister added.

The risk of floods in and around Recife, the capital of Pernambuco state, remains “very high” for Monday, said the national disaster monitoring centre, Cemaden.

The force of the landslides ripped apart houses in neighbourhoods such as Jardim Monteverde, on the far outskirts of Recife.

Rescue workers have found more than 20 bodies buried in the mud that tore through the neighbourhood Saturday, and said they expect to find more.

Dozens of emergency workers are still digging through the ocean of muck, as clean-up crews in yellow uniforms clear the streets, slowly working their way through the wreckage, a photographer said.

In just hours on Friday and Saturday, parts of Pernambuco received 70 percent of the rain they usually get in the entire month of May.

Such tragedies are becoming a familiar script in Brazil.

In February, 233 people were killed in floods and landslides in the southeastern city of Petrópolis, in Rio de Janeiro state.

In January, floods and landslides killed at least 28 people in southeastern Brazil, mostly in São Paulo state.

And in December, torrential rains killed 24 people in the northeastern state of Bahia.

On that occasion, Bolsonaro — who is trailing leftist ex-president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the polls ahead of elections in October — faced criticism for not interrupting his year-end beach vacation to visit the disaster zone.

Unfortunately these tragedies happen, a country the size of a continent has its share of problems, Bolsonaro said Monday.

Meteorologists say the heavy rains lashing Pernambuco and, to a lesser extent, four other northeastern states are the product of a typical seasonal phenomenon called “eastern waves”- areas of atmospheric disturbance that move from Africa to Brazil’s northeastern coastal region.

Experts say the rains are now being augmented by climate change. Because a hotter atmosphere holds more water, global warming increases the risk and intensity of flooding from extreme rainfall.


In Brazil, such tragedies have tended to hit hardest in poor neighbourhoods, especially hillside favelas, or slums.








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