Deadly floods devastate Solomon Islands

16 killed, dozens missing, 10,500 homeless

Flood waters run past damaged homes in the Solomon Islands capital of Honiara. Entire houses have been washed away by the flood water
Flood waters run past damaged homes in the Solomon Islands capital of Honiara. Entire houses have been washed away by the flood water
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Al-Jazeera.com :Heavy rain and flooding killed at least 16 people and left 10,500 homeless in the Solomon Islands’ capital Honiara, with another 30 missing and the death toll expected to rise, aid workers said.Entire communities were swept away as the city’s main river, the Matanikau, burst its banks late on Thursday, bringing down bridges and inundating the downtown area in a disaster said to be one of the worst ever faced by the Pacific nation.”This level of flooding is unusual. I’ve spoken to older people who lived on the island and they have said they’ve never seen anything like this before,” Save the Children’s Solomons head of logistics, Graham Kenna, told Al Jazeera.Kenna also said that 16 evacuation points had been set up to shelter more than 10,000 homeless people, a huge proportion of the population in a city of only 70,000.Fears of dengue fever was a major concern in the evacuation camps. “Dengue fever was an already growing crisis here before the flooding. It is getting worse and worse and I predict that the fever will skyrocket when the place dries up,” Kenna said. “We are trying to put in place and bring medical teams from Australia as there is only one hospital on the island where the capital is.”The flooding followed days of heavy rain which was forecast to continue.Some of my staff witnessed horrific things, especially the deaths of children and babies and it will take a long time, both for my team and the locals here, to recover from this.Al Jazeera’s senior meteorologist Everton Fox said the a low-pressure area could develop into a tropical storm.”This slow-moving weather system has drifted slowly southwards across the islands dumping heavy and steady rain in the last few days,” he said.”The low is expected to strengthen as it moves into the northern Coral Sea and may eventually become a tropical cyclone in the process.”Sune Gudnitz, regional director of the the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), told the AFP news agency that flood waters were continuing to build.

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