Libya floods: Entire neighbourhoods dragged into the sea

Rescue teams in Libya are struggling to retrieve the bodies of victims that have been swept out to sea in tsunami-like flood waters.

At least 2,300 have been killed, according to the ambulance authority in Derna, the worst affected city.

Two dams and four bridges collapsed in Derna, submerging much of the city when Storm Daniel hit on Sunday.

About 10,000 people are reported missing, the Red Crescent says, and the death toll is expected to rise further.

Some aid has started to arrive, including from Egypt, but rescue efforts have been hampered by the political situation in Libya, with the country split between two rival governments.

The US, Germany, Iran, Italy, Qatar and Turkey are among the countries that have said they have sent or are ready to send aid.

Video footage recorded after dark on Sunday shows a river of floodwater churning through the city with cars bobbing helplessly in the current.

There are harrowing stories of people being swept out to sea, while others clung onto rooftops to survive.

“I was shocked by what I saw, it’s like a tsunami,” Hisham Chkiouat, from Libya’s eastern-based government, said.

He told BBC Newshour that the collapse of one of the dams to the south of Derna had dragged large parts of the city into the sea.

“A massive neighbourhood has been destroyed – there is a large number of victims, which is increasing each hour.”

Kasim Al-Qatani, an aid worker in the town of Bayda, told the BBC’s Newsnight programme it was difficult for rescuers to reach Derna as most of the main paths into the city were “out of service because of huge damage”.

An investigation has been launched into why the floods were able to cause such devastation, he said, adding that 2.5bn Libyan Dinar (£412m; $515m) would be given to help rebuild Derna and the eastern city of Benghazi.

The cities of Soussa, Al-Marj and Misrata were also affected by Sunday’s storm.

Water engineering experts told the BBC it is likely the upper dam, around 12km (eight miles) from the city, had failed first, sending its water sweeping down the river valley towards the second dam, which lies closer to Derna – where neighbourhoods were inundated.

“At first we just thought it was heavy rain but at midnight we heard a huge explosion and it was the dam bursting,” Raja Sassi, who survived along with his wife and small daughter, told Reuters news agency.

Libyan journalist Noura Eljerbi, who is based in Tunisia told the BBC she only found out that around 35 of her relatives who all lived in the same apartment block in Derna were still alive after contacting a local rescue team.

“The house has been destroyed but my family managed to get out before things got worse. They are safe now,” she said.

Mr Qatani said there was no clean drinking water in Derna, and a lack of medical supplies.

He added that the only hospital in Derna could no longer take patients because “there are more than 700 dead bodies waiting in the hospital and it’s not that big”.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-66785466

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

Libya asks for international help as 2,000 people feared dead in flood after Storm Daniel sweeps across country

Many of the thousands who are currently unaccounted for are believed to have been swept away by the floodwater after Storm Daniel caused immense damage.

Libya has asked for international help with around 2,000 people feared dead after a massive flood ripped through the city of Derna following a powerful storm.

Mediterranean Storm Daniel has caused catastrophic flooding, resulting in the complete engulfing of entire neighbourhoods after it hit the country’s eastern region.

On Monday night, Libya’s government declared the eastern Cyrenaica province as a disaster area.

Earlier, the head of the Red Crescent aid group in the region claimed the number of confirmed dead was 150, with that figure expected to rise to 250.

Pic: Libya Almasar TV/AP

In a phone interview with al Masar television station Monday, Prime Minister Ossama Hamad of the east Libyan government said that 2,000 were feared dead in Derna, and thousands were believed missing.

Ahmed al Mismari, the spokesperson for the Libyan National Army (LNA) that controls eastern Libya, said the disaster came after dams above Derna collapsed, “sweeping whole neighbourhoods with their residents into the sea”.

He said the number of those who had died was over 2,000 and estimated the number of missing individuals to be between 5,000 and 6,000.

Abdel-Rahim Mazek, the head of the primary medical centre in the eastern town of Bayda, has so far reported at least 46 deaths.

In the northeastern coastal town of Susa, the ambulance and emergency service confirmed the loss of seven lives.

And in the towns of Shahatt and Omar al Mokhtar, health minister Ossama Abduljaleel reported seven more deaths.

Meanwhile, one person was reported dead in the town of Marj on Sunday.

Libya remains politically divided between its eastern and western regions, and the public services have deteriorated since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising, which triggered years of ongoing conflict.

The internationally recognised government in Tripoli does not exercise control over the eastern territories.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/libya-asks-for-international-help-as-2000-people-feared-dead-in-flood-after-being-hit-by-storm-daniel-12959408

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