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45 people dead in South Africa floods, mudslides

  • Days of pounding rain flooded areas and shut roads across the city of Durban, while landslips suspended train services across KwaZulu-Natal province
  • The situation was aggravated by power outages as the country’s ageing infrastructure appeared unable to absorb the masses of water

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The Vishnu Hindu Temple was severely damaged by flooding on Mhlathuzana river in Chatsworth, outside Durban, South Africa on Tuesday. Photo: AP

Prolonged rains and flooding in the Durban area of South Africa have claimed the lives of at least 45 people, damaging the port, major highways and surrounding areas in KwaZulu-Natal province, according to local officials.

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South Africa’s military has been deployed to Durban and the surrounding eThekwini metropolitan area on Tuesday to assist with rescue operations as residents flee flooded areas.

Some people have been swept away by surging waters, say officials. Durban port, the largest and busiest shipping terminal in Sub-Saharan Africa, has been inundated with floodwaters that carried away shipping containers and left them in a jumbled pile.

A general view of containers that fell over at a container storage facility following heavy rains and winds in Durban on Tuesday: Photo: AFP
A general view of containers that fell over at a container storage facility following heavy rains and winds in Durban on Tuesday: Photo: AFP

Authorities are providing shelter for several hundred people whose homes and possessions were washed away by the floods and technicians are working to restore electricity to areas where power had been knocked out.

Emergency services have for several days been responding to urgent calls for help from people stuck in their houses but the number is beginning to decrease, emergency services spokesman Robert McKenzie told Associated Press on Tuesday.

“There are still cases of collapsed buildings where operations are still continuing,” he said.

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“Most of our power stations have been flooded and our teams are working hard to restore power to the affected areas,” Moxilisi Kaunda, mayor of the eThekwini metropolitan municipality, told a press briefing Tuesday.

“Our teams are on the ground to try and return the situation to normalcy,” he said. “We continue to assess the damages, we cannot be sure of the extent of the damages at the moment.”

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