Libya: how a city with 50,000 people disappeared after Storm Daniel – News

by time news

2023-09-18 04:00:11

Floods caused by Storm Daniel in eastern Libya devastated part of the city of Derna, with 50,000 inhabitants, causing thousands of deaths and an unknown number of missing people.

The Mediterranean storm reached the east coast of Libya on Sunday night (10), hit the city of Benghazi and headed east, passing through Shahat, site of the ancient Greek city of Cyrene, Al Marj, Al Baida and Susa (Apollonia of Cyrene, in Antiquity), but it affected Derna with particular violence.

The waters broke two dams on the Wadi Derna River on Sunday night and a powerful current, similar to that of a tsunami, leveled entire neighborhoods and destroyed bridges, before advancing towards the Mediterranean.

The flood blocked many roads, making access to the site of the disaster difficult.

Dead and injured

Authorities controlling eastern Libya, a country where there are two rival governments that dominate different parts of the territory, reported on Thursday that 3,800 deaths had been recorded, but feared there were many more.

The eastern region of the country where the disaster occurred is under the control of authorities that are not recognized by the international community.

An official from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (FICR) said there was a “huge” death toll, which could reach several thousand, with 10,000 missing.

Other authorities stated that the death toll could exceed 10,000.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that at least 30,000 people were displaced from Derna, in addition to 3,000 inhabitants who had to flee from Al Baida and more than 2,000 from Benghazi.

This UN agency estimates that there are 884 thousand people directly affected by the catastrophe.

Destruction of eastern Libya

Experts explained that a combination of the deterioration of infrastructure, buildings built without respect for urban planning standards in the last decade and the lack of preparation for a catastrophe of this type turned the city into an open-air cemetery.

Most of the deaths could have been avoided, said Petteri Taalas, director of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), on Thursday, explaining that “warnings could have been issued and emergency management forces would have been able to carry out the evacuation of the population”.

The senior UN official noted that the years of conflict that have wracked Libya have largely destroyed the weather observation network.

Libya, an oil-rich country, descended into chaos and war after the popular uprising that toppled dictator Moammar Gaddafi in 2011, and there are currently two governments vying for power, one recognized by the UN in the capital, Tripoli, to the west, and the other in the east zone, where the disaster occurred.

Arrival of help

Aid convoys from Tripolitania, in the west of the country, began arriving in Derna on Monday morning (11). The internationally recognized government, led by Abdelhamid Dbeibah, announced the dispatch of two medical planes and a helicopter, 87 doctors, a team of rescuers and search dogs.

The director of the UN Office for Humanitarian Coordination (OCHA), Martin Griffiths, announced on Wednesday the release of US$10 million (R$48 million) from an emergency fund and said that “a strong team” is deployed at the ground to support and finance the international response.

Griffiths said on Friday that “the extent” of the tragedy was still unknown.

The World Food Program (WFP) said it had begun providing aid to more than 5,000 families displaced by the floods and said there were thousands of people “without food and shelter.”

The UN, the United States and several countries in the Middle East and North Africa have also promised to send help and foreign rescue teams have been sent in the hope of finding survivors.

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