South Africa: Flood Death Toll Passes 306
Flooding in South Africa’s eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal has killed overe 306 people, officials announced on Wednesday. The latest figure eclipses the previous number of 59 fatalities reported by government
Earlier on Wednesday, the province’s health chief Nomagugu Simelane-Zulu told local news station eNCA that late on Tuesday over 306 bodies had been received at mortuary facilities.
“As of late last night, we had received something close to 306 bodies in our two different mortuaries,” Simelane-Zulu said. The minister confirmed the figure when asked by the eNCA reporter and said they were directly linked to the floods.
That number rose a short while later with the spokeswoman for disaster management confirming that the number had now hit 306 deaths.
The torrential rain has caused homes to collapse and hillsides have been swept away.
Adrian Kriesch is in the port city of Durban and tweeted from the scene where homes had caved in on families sheltering inside.
“Shocking and sad how many kids died during the floods. Those are the books of 10-year-old Ayanda, her room collapsed on her. In the neighbors house three people passed away. An old lady with her two grandchildren. The youngest was three.
South Africa’s president has pledged support to those affected.
“President Cyril Ramaphosa is currently here, he’s talking to the residents, assessing their needs trying to help. At the moment the government says the major challenge is find all the victims but also assist those who lost their houses,” Kriesch said.
According to local government officials, many people are unaccounted for.
Record rainfall continues falling
Rain has continued to fall in parts of the province and flood warnings have also been issued in the neighboring province of the Eastern Cape.
Torrential rain swamped communities in the coastal city and surrounding areas over the past few days. According to the South African Weather Service more than 300 millimetres (13 inches) fell on Monday, making it the heaviest total of rainfall seen in a single day in 60 years.