Brazil flood death toll rises to 482, more feared

TERESOPOLIS, Brazil, (Reuters) – Rescue workers dug  for survivors yesterday and struggled to reach areas cut off  by floods and landslides that have killed at least 482 people  in one of Brazil’s deadliest natural disasters in decades.

Torrents of mud and water set off by heavy rains left a  trail of destruction through the mountainous Serrana region  near Rio de Janeiro, toppling houses, buckling roads and  burying entire families as they slept.

“It’s like an earthquake struck some areas,” said Jorge  Mario, the mayor of Teresopolis, where more than 200 people  were killed and scores more are feared to be dead.

“The death toll is going to climb a lot. There are a lot of  people buried who can’t get help because rescue teams can’t get  there,” Mario said, adding that three of the town’s  neighborhoods were destroyed by the flooding.

Hillsides and riverbanks in the area, about 60 miles (100  km) north of Rio, collapsed after the equivalent of a month’s  rain fell in 24 hours from Tuesday night.

More heavy rain is forecast, complicating rescue efforts  and raising the risk of further mudslides.
The homes of rich and poor alike were swept away in and  around Teresopolis and other towns, likely causing billions of  dollars in damage. But the brunt of the disaster was borne by  poorer rural residents in houses built in risky areas without  formal planning permission.

The floods have not affected Brazil’s main export crops —  soy, sugar cane, oranges and coffee — but could push up local  food prices further as the small Serrana region is an important  producer of fruit and vegetables for the Rio area.

Rio, famed for its beaches and Carnival, will co-host  soccer’s World Cup in 2014 and host the Olympics in 2016.

Rescuers tried to haul residents from raging floodwaters  and went through the ruins of homes in search of survivors,  often finding only corpses. One success came when a 6-month-old  baby was rescued from the rubble of a house, drawing thunderous  cheers from residents.

One woman held a dog in the ruins of her house as powerful  waters tore at the remaining walls. She grabbed a rope thrown  by residents from a nearby rooftop and eventually was pulled to  safety, after dropping the dog into the vicious current.

In Nova Friburgo, a rural town first settled by Swiss  immigrants, at least 200 people died, local officials said.
President Dilma Rousseff, facing her first major challenge  since taking ffice on Jan. 1, called the disaster a tragedy  that could not be blamed only on nature.

“Housing in areas of risk is the rule in Brazil rather than  the exception,” she said in Rio after flying over the flooded  region and visiting Nova Friburgo, where much of the damage was  done to homes built precariously at the base of steep hills.

“When there aren’t housing policies, where are people who  earn no more than twice the minimum wage going to live?”
andslides and flash floods are common in much of Brazil,  often exposing poor urban planning and a lack of preventive  action by authorities.

Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper said it was the worst natural  disaster to hit Brazil in four decades.
Raging floodwaters and rivers of mud submerged some houses  and left cars crumpled like tin cans. More then 13,500 people  were left homeless, authorities said.

Rescue teams had yet to reach several of the worst-hit  parts of Teresopolis, including one neighborhood where about  150 houses were believed to have been destroyed.

Dozens of bodies were lined up outside a police station in  the city center awaiting identification before being moved to a  church, taxi driver Vinicius Bittencourt told Reuters.

“The bodies were there because there is no more space in  the morgue,” he said. “People are walking in the street crying.  I’ve seen people carrying dead children wrapped in blankets.”

At least 39 people also died in Petropolis, a picturesque  town nestled in the mountains that served as the summer  residence for Brazil’s royal family in the 19th century.  Another 18 people were killed in nearby Sumidouro.

Firefighters used heavy machinery to remove debris blocking  their path to some of the worst-affected areas.
“The situation is critical but we have to advance, we can’t  stop,” said fire department colonel Jose Paulo Miranda.
Rousseff has earmarked 780 million reais ($460 million) in  emergency aid for the region. The government said it was  sending 210 troops from the National Public Security Force to  help identify bodies.

Two navy helicopters are assisting rescue operations and  the navy is also sending a mobile field hospital to the area.