More than 160,000 evacuated in deadly Latin American floods

Agence France-Presse

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More than 160,000 evacuated in deadly Latin American floods

EPA

The areas hardest hit in the week leading up to Christmas are in Paraguay, where 4 people have been killed by falling trees

ASUNCION, Paraguay – More than 160,000 people have been driven from their homes in Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay in some of the worst floods in decades, which have left at least 6 people dead, authorities said Saturday, December 26.

The areas hardest hit in the week leading up to Christmas were in Paraguay, where 4 people have been killed by falling trees. President Horacio Cartes has declared a state of emergency to free up more than $3.5 million in disaster funds.

The intense rain storms, caused by an unusually strong “El Nino” pattern, have forced 130,000 Paraguayans from their homes, authorities said. In the capital Asuncion, thousands were temporarily without power.

Emergency personnel were carrying out rescue and evacuation operations, said David Arellano, the head of operations for the National Emergency Secretariat (SEN).

“We cannot abandon the thousands of families who each year are affected by flooding,” Cartes said in his Christmas message. 

El Niño is the name given to a weather pattern associated with a sustained period of warming in the central and eastern tropical Pacific that can spark deadly and costly climate extremes. 

Last month, the UN’s World Meteorological Organization warned the phenomenon was the worst in more than 15 years, and one of the strongest since 1950.

In northeastern Argentina, two people were killed and about 20,000 were evacuated from their homes by flooding caused by a rise in the level of the Uruguay River, authorities said.

Entre Rios province was the worst off with about 10,000 people displaced, most of them in Concordia, a city of some 170,000 located on the banks of the river where officials said it was the most serious flooding in 50 years.

Uruguay, which borders the river, has declared a state of emergency in several northern departments. As of Saturday, about 9,000 people were forced from their homes, according to national emergency officials.

And in Brazil, President Dilma Rousseff on Saturday flew by helicopter to survey the damage in southern Rio Grande do Sul state, where about 9,000 people have been displaced by flooding in recent days.

The federal government has released $1.7 million in emergency funds for the affected areas. – Rappler.com

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