Thousands
of commuters have been stranded in southern parts of Sierra Leone Photo: BBC
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Heavy rains in parts of
Sierra Leone have washed away houses and cut off major roads. BBC reports that officials in the
southern district of Bo told me that over 70 homes had been destroyed in one
area alone, leaving hundreds of people without shelter. The
main road linking the neighbouring district of Kenema with the rest of the
country had disappeared under flood water.
Heavy
floods have hit a string of villages in southern Sierra Leone, wiping away
scores of houses, trapping villagers and leaving vast areas inaccessible to
humanitarian teams scrambling to assess the damage, aid officials said on
Friday. Two
rivers in the Pujehun district, around 300 km south-east of the capital
Freetown, burst their banks after heavy rains last weekend, according to
officials with the Sierra Leone Red Cross.
"People
left their food and all their belongings and had to move for their lives,"
Gassimu Mallah, an official with the Sierra Leone Red Cross who visited the
area this week, told IRIN on Friday.
Mallah
said villagers had told him that this was the worst flooding they had seen
since 1945.
Entire
villages had been swallowed up, Mallah said. The population of Titonko was
trapped as the floodwater had completely surrounded the village.
Preliminary
estimates from an UN inter-agency mission showed about 3,000 people living in
19 villages affected by the flooding.
Reuters
news agency quoted a government official as saying the floods had killed at
least 20 people, but this could not be independently confirmed.
UN
and Red Cross officials told IRIN said they did not yet know the number of
total number of deaths. A Red Cross worker said only one death had been
confirmed as of Friday.
The
UN humanitarian coordinator in Sierra Leone, Erasmus Ibom, said it was
difficult to know for sure how many people had been killed or affected because
the rains had washed out roads, cutting off several villages.
The
UN had planned to send a helicopter to do an aerial assessment on Friday but
the mission had to be postponed because of bad weather, Ibom said.
The
World Food Programme, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), the World Health
Organisation and the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) are meeting to coordinate
assistance efforts. They plan to distribute food and other basic supplies, Ibom
said.
Meanwhile
the Sierra Leone Red Cross is concerned that its limited supplies will run out
before it can help flood victims whose homes and belongings have been
destroyed.
"That
is our worry," Solomon Conteh who is based in the Red Cross office in
Freetown said, adding that an appeal would soon be launched. "We will
urgently need mats, tarpaulins, blankets, kitchen sets and other basic
supplies."
Cholera is also a serious concern because many wells have been completely wiped out in villages which do not have access to healthcare even in the dry season.
Cholera is also a serious concern because many wells have been completely wiped out in villages which do not have access to healthcare even in the dry season.
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