Libya floods: People in Derna use bare hands to dig for survivors – as number of dead rises to 11,300

After years of strife, weak and corrupt governance, corruption and negligence, the Libyan authorities were simply not up to preparing for or coping with a disaster of this magnitude – and it is the Libyan people who’ve been killed, or left displaced in their thousands.

Libyan civilians ‘digging bodies out themselves’

Libya is a country in anguish.

Her people are suffering a fresh kind of horror after years of civil war, fighting, corruption, greed and people smuggling.

Now floods have devastated the port city of Derna and the communities and villagers around.

And what’s so much worse is that the natural disaster caused by Storm Daniel, which has been sweeping across European countries, has been compounded by a man-made catastrophe.

The number of deaths has soared to 11,300 in Derna, Libyan Red Crescent said on Thursday.

Those in Derna, the worst-affected town, are calling it a disaster of “biblical proportions”.

Civilians in the town have been using their bare hands to try to dig for survivors… instead they’re finding just the remains of victims.

The airport at Benghazi has been bustling with people trying to get home or go to the area themselves to track down missing relatives. There are an estimated 10,000 unaccounted for.

It’s hard to know exact figures but the civilians on the ground are stunned and terrified at the scale of the devastation this torrent of water caused.

They expect the death toll to rise still but with little coordination on the ground, accurate figures are tough to come by.

The collapse of not one but two dams in Derna unleashed a terrible violent water force which upended vehicles, tore down houses, apartment blocks and schools.

One shocked survivor showed us pictures of the utterly flattened muddy landscape in front of him where dozens of buildings once stood.

“They’ve all just gone… Derna has gone,” Maged told us.

“I can’t believe it. I’ve lived 27 years or so in Britain but I was working on my retirement home here in Derna where I am from. It used to be beautiful. Now there’s nothing left. I don’t even know if I can stay here now. The memories are just too hard.”

Another survivor told us of the despair at the complete destruction of the area.

“It is a disaster of biblical proportions”, Mere Bijou said.

“And our government is to blame… anyone in charge in Libya is to blame. Everyone knew Storm Daniel was coming but they did nothing about it. They didn’t protect us, they didn’t try to save us, they didn’t do anything.”

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/libya-floods-people-in-derna-use-bare-hands-to-dig-for-survivors-but-find-only-remains-12961295

Libya flooding: More than 5,300 feared dead after dams burst

Emergency workers have uncovered more than 1,500 bodies in the wreckage of the eastern city of Derna.

More than 5,300 people are feared dead after devastating flooding struck Libya.

A quarter of the eastern city of Derna was wiped out by floodwaters after dams burst as Storm Daniel hit the country, the local administration said, with more than 1,500 bodies recovered so far.

There are fears the number of those killed will rise further, with 10,000 people reported missing after entire neighbourhoods were washed away.

More than 5,300 people in Derna alone have been killed, according to Mohammed Abu-Lamousha, a spokesman for the east Libya interior ministry.

Cars stacked on top of each other. Pic: Libyan government via AP

Derna’s ambulance authority earlier put the number at 2,300.

Images showed a mass grave piled with bodies.

Pic: AP

Disaster zone

Derna has been declared a disaster zone.

Tamer Ramadan, head of the International Federation of the Red Cross (IFRC) in Libya, said: “We can confirm from our independent sources of information that the number of missing people is hitting 10,000 so far.

“The death toll is huge and might reach thousands.”

https://x.com/CIRA_CSU/status/1701657066627293503?s=20

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/libya-flooding-10-000-people-thought-to-be-missing-after-dams-burst-12959679

Exit mobile version