Brazil flood deaths top 700 as more rains loom

RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) – The death toll from  flash floods and mudslides in Rio de Janeiro’s picturesque  Serrana region reached 702 yesterday, a number that is likely  to rise further in one of Brazil’s worst natural disasters on  record.

Authorities say many residents in the region are still  missing — some believed to be buried. Hundreds of people are  still in areas at risk of fresh mudslides, some cut off from  help by washed out roads and bridges while others refuse to  leave for fear their houses will be looted.

The death toll is still rising daily as rescuers dig out  more bodies from the wreckage. Authorities have ventured no  estimates of the number of missing, but local papers estimated  on Monday over 100 people are unaccounted for.

Rains let up during the day yesterday in the disaster-hit  areas but picked up again in southeast Brazil last  evening.

Army helicopters have been carrying out rescue and supply  operations to attend to residents cut off from help for nearly  a week since rains unleashed a sudden spate of hillside mud,  trees and boulders on the tourist towns below, sweeping away or  burying neighbourhoods.

In the hilly resort region north of Rio de Janeiro city,  Nova Friburgo has registered the greatest number of deaths with  335, followed by Teresopolis with 285.

“We are advising people who live in areas of the highest  risk to leave their homes,” Rubens Placido of the Nova Friburgo  Fire Department said. “There are people that don’t want to  leave, so we are checking with the courts if we can obtain  support from the police force.”

Populist politics and lack of urban planning across much of  Brazil has allowed the construction of whole neighborhoods in  areas with high risk of flooding and mudslides.

The federal government has earmarked 780 million reais  ($463.5 million) in emergency aid for the region.

Yesterday, President Dilma Rousseff met with World Bank  officials who said they were working out the final details on a  $485 million emergency relief loan to the state of Rio de  Janeiro for the disaster hit areas.

“We hope the first tranche of the loan, $290 million, can  be approved in the coming weeks,” said Makhtar Diop, director  of the World Bank for Brazil.