Brazil flood death toll rises to 224 – officials

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – The death toll from  mudslides and flooding in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro state has  risen to 224, its fire department said yesterday, about a week  after heavy rains began pounding the coastal region.

Authorities reported on Friday up to 212 people had died  after the rains — the worst in decades — triggered mudslides  and flooding that devastated poor hillside communities and left  thousands homeless in and around Brazil’s second-biggest city.

The worst single mudslide occurred Wednesday night when a  torrent of mud destroyed houses, stores and churches in a slum  built on a former garbage dump in Niteroi, a city located  across a bay from Rio.

The Brazilian government has sent troops and allocated 200  million reais ($113 million) to help the state confront the  disaster, and the United States said on Friday it was donating  $50 million to help the more than 50,000 people made homeless.

Rio’s mayor, Eduardo Paes, signed a decree allowing the  city to force residents to leave 158 locations deemed at risk  from the disaster. He had already announced that the city would  remove between 1,500 and 2,000 families from two slums,  prompting resistance from some residents’ groups.

The chaos caused by the rains has renewed attention on  Rio’s poor infrastructure and chaotic slums as it prepares to  host the soccer World Cup in 2014 and the Summer Olympics in  2016.
($1=1.78 reais)