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SHAKE AND BLOW
Mozambique begins evacuating 55,000 people hit by floods
by Staff Writers
Maputo (AFP) Jan 22, 2013


Girl aged 8 killed in quake off Indonesia, 15 injured
Banda Aceh, Indonesia (AFP) Jan 22, 2013 - A 5.9-magnitude earthquake struck off Indonesia's Aceh province Tuesday, killing an eight-year-old girl and leaving 15 people injured, officials said.

The quake struck 112 kilometres (70 miles) southeast of the provincial capital of Banda Aceh at 22:22 GMT, at a depth of 37 kilometres, the US Geological Survey said.

"An eight-year-old girl in Pidie district was killed after a cupboard in her bedroom fell on her when the quake shook the ground," the district's disaster management agency chief Apriyadi, who goes by one name, told AFP.

He added that 15 people were injured, five of them seriously, due to collapsing walls.

At least 50 houses in the district were also damaged with walls partly collapsed, he said.

The Indonesian Meteorology, Geophysics and Climatology Agency (BMKG) issued no tsunami alert.

Indonesia sits on the Pacific "Ring of Fire" where continental plates collide, causing frequent seismic and volcanic activity.

Mozambique authorities on Tuesday started emergency evacuations in the flood-struck south where 55,000 people are said to be in immediate danger from rising water levels.

"We are asking people to move to safer areas. We estimate there are 55,000 people affected," a spokeswoman for Mozambique's Disaster Relief Management Institute, Rita Almeida, told AFP.

Emergency teams are already in place and motorboats have been dispatched to the area to take people to safe ground.

The south and the centre of the country have been placed on red alert after experiencing the heaviest rainfalls seen since devastating floods killed around 800 people in 2000.

The latest downpours have already killed 35 people since the start of the rainy season in October, and eight major rivers are above crisis levels.

Experts predict that the southern town of Chokwe -- which saw water rise to roof level in previous floods -- could again bear the brunt of the floods.

"The situation is critical," said Elidio Jamisse, a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) advisor to Mozambique's emergency response service.

"The Massingir dam on the Elephant river (a tributary of the Limpopo) is already at 3,500 cubic metres per second," he said, noting: "This water will join the water from the Limpopo. All this water is headed for Chokwe."

Areas to the north of the town, where the river had risen to more than 11 metres (36 feet), were already under water.

"When these 11.8 metres of water arrive in Chokwe, it will be added to the water that is already above the level of alert," Jamisse said.

"The prediction is that starting tomorrow it will arrive in Chokwe. That is why all our teams are working to evacuate people."

From Sunday to Monday almost 185 millimetres (over seven inches) of rain poured over the Limpopo river basin in southern Gaza province, where the most vulnerable communities live.

Figures from the Mozambican National Water Directorate on Tuesday showed that the southeastern town of Panda received some 233 millimetres (nine inches) of rain between Monday and Tuesday.

International organisations are preparing for the worst-case scenario.

"There is a big dyke in Chokwe that is giving problems. They are afraid if that dyke breaks, all those people will have to move rapidly," World Food Programme country head Lola Castro told AFP.

The evacuees will be housed in 10 temporary accommodation centres, she said.

Rains in neighbouring countries also swelled rivers, and authorities opened the sluices from two dams in the south to lower dangerous levels.

Coastal Mozambique is home to nine international river basins, making it especially vulnerable to flooding.

Although the rainfall has stopped in most areas, the risk of flooding remains high as waters arrive from further inland.

Neighbouring South Africa has been hit by torrential rains, and the Limpopo River, which flows to Mozambique's Xai-Xai in the affected Gaza province, has flooded.

Authorities in South Africa's giant wildlife reserve Kruger National Park, which borders Mozambique, were also forced to evacuate dozens of tourists and staff.

At least eight people have died in the northern-most district of Vhembe in Limpopo province.

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Related Links
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SHAKE AND BLOW
Floods ease in Jakarta, at least 11 dead
Jakarta (AFP) Jan 18, 2013
Floods in Indonesia's capital Jakarta which have killed at least 11 people and left two missing eased Friday, authorities said, warning however of more torrential rains which could hamper relief efforts. The capital's worst floods in five years have forced 18,000 people from their homes, the nation's disaster agency said, with many ferried to temporary shelters on rafts. "Since January 1 ... read more


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