Toll in South Africa’s deadliest floods on record tops 300

Residents salvage the remains of what use to be the United Methodist Church of South Africa in Clermont, near Durban, on April 13, 2022, following heavy rains that left four children dead in the area. – Residents on April 13, 2022 started sifting through the remains of shattered homes after floods and landslips stoked by record rains devastated the South African city of Durban city and surrounding area, killing at least 59 and leaving many missing. (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP) 

 

by John MKHIZE and Linda GIVETASH
Agence France Presse

DURBAN, South Africa (AFP) — The death toll from devastating floods in and around the South African port city of Durban has risen to 306, the government said Wednesday, after roads and hillsides were washed away as homes collapsed.

The heaviest rains in 60 years pummelled Durban’s municipality, known as eThekwini. According to an AFP tally. The storm is the deadliest on record in South Africa.

“By the evening of 13th of April, we have been informed that the death toll from the floods disaster in KZN (KwaZulu-Natal) province has risen to 306 people” Nonala Ndlovu, spokeswoman for the provincial disaster management department said.

Her office said the death toll is “one of the darkest moments in the history” of KZN.

Earlier Wednesday Ndlovu had put the toll at 259.

President Cyril Ramaphosa, has described the floods as a “catastrophe” and a “calamity”.

“Bridges have collapsed. Roads have collapsed. People have died,” he said, adding that one family lost 10 members.

At least 248 schools have been damaged

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (C-R) greets a family member at the United Methodist Church of South Africa in Clermont, near Durban, on April 13, 2022 of one of the 4 children that passed away in the surrounding area following heavy rains and floods. – Residents on April 13, 2022 started sifting through the remains of shattered homes after floods and landslips stoked by record rains devastated the South African city of Durban city and surrounding area, killing at least 59 and leaving many missing. (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP) 

“This is a catastrophe of enormous proportions,” he said, addressing a local community after inspecting the damage from the floods.

The search for missing persons is still going on, said Ramaphosa, promising to “spare nothing” in dealing with the disaster and offering assistance to the affected.

“This disaster is part of climate change. We no longer can postpone what we need to do… to deal with climate change.

“It is here, and our disaster management capability needs to be at a higher level,” said the president.

The United Methodist Church in the township of Clermont was reduced to a pile of rubble. Four children from a local family died when a wall collapsed on them.

Other homes hung precariously to the hillside, miraculously still intact after much of the ground underneath them washed away in mudslides.

– ‘It’s scary’ –
Nokuthula Ntantiso’s house survived, but many others in her Umlazi township did not.

“It’s scary, because even last night I didn’t sleep… because I was wondering if even this (home) that I’m sleeping in can collapse at any time,” the 31-year-old call centre operator said.

She tried to go back to work on Wednesday, but turned back at a collapsed bridge.

Meanwhile a dozen crocodiles that went missing from breeding ponds after the heavy rains swamped a crocodile farm near Durban have reportedly been recaptured.

The storm forced sub-Saharan Africa’s most important port to halt operations, as a main access road suffered heavy damage.

Shipping containers were tossed about, washed into mountains of metal that rose taller than the elevated highways.

Residents of Umlazi township stand over a bridge and watch containers that fell over at a container storage facility following heavy rains and winds in Durban, on April 12, 2022. – At least five people have been killed in floods and mudslides across South Africa’s port city of Durban following heavy rains in recent days.Days of rains have flooded several areas and shut dozens of roads across the city (Photo by Phill Magakoe / AFP)

Sections of other roads were washed away, leaving behind gashes in the earth bigger than large trucks.

The main highways were littered with trees and mud so deep that bulldozers were called to help clear it.

Highway barriers lay twisted like pipe cleaners along the side of the roads.

“We see such tragedies hitting other countries like Mozambique, Zimbabwe, but now we are the affected ones,” Ramaphosa said as he met with grieving families near the ruins of the church.

Residents salvage the remains of what use to be the United Methodist Church of South Africa in Clermont, near Durban, on April 13, 2022, following heavy rains that left four children dead in the area. – Residents on April 13, 2022 started sifting through the remains of shattered homes after floods and landslips stoked by record rains devastated the South African city of Durban city and surrounding area, killing at least 59 and leaving many missing. (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP) 

 

A general view of debris in Bhambayi township following heavy rains, mudslides and winds in Durban, on April 13, 2022. – Devastating floods killed 259 in the South African city of Durban and surrounding areas, a senior government official said on April 13, 2022, after hillsides were washed away, homes collapsed, and more people were still feared missing.
The heaviest rains in 60 years pummelled Durban’s municipality, known as eThekwini. According to an AFP tally, the storm is the deadliest on record in South Africa. (Photo by RAJESH JANTILAL / AFP)

South Africa’s neighbours suffer such natural disasters from tropical storms almost every year, but Africa’s most industrialised country has been largely shielded from the storms that form over the Indian Ocean.

These rains were not tropical, but rather caused by a weather system called a cut-off low that brought rain and cold weather to much of the country.

When storms reached the warmer and more humid climate in Durban’s KZN province, even more rain poured down.

450mm in 48 hours –
“Some parts of KZN have received more than 450 millimetres (18 inches) in the last 48 hours,” said Tawana Dipuo, a forecaster at the national weather service. That amounts to nearly half of Durban’s annual rainfall of 1,009 mm.

Rain continued in parts of the city on Wednesday afternoon, and a flood warning was issued for the neighbouring province of Eastern Cape.

The storm struck as Durban had barely recovered from deadly riots last July which claimed more than 350 lives, in South Africa’s worst unrest since the end of apartheid.

The national police force deployed 300 extra officers to the region, as the air force sent planes to help with the rescue operations.

More than 6,000 homes were damaged.

Floods killed 140 people in 1995.

 

© Agence France-Presse