Homeless as
swathes of Sierra Leone’s capital were submerged by massive flooding after
hours of torrential rain, emergency management officials said Thursday.
Residents
described how waters destroyed their homes, swept away household goods and
damaged vehicles as Freetown, an overcrowded city of 1.2 million, was pounded
overnight.
“The seven
corpses were brought in intermittently overnight but we know that more will
come,” Amara Kamara, a mortuary attendant at the city’s main Connaught
Hospital, told AFP.
“The corpses
include two kids aged three-and-a-half and four, as well as a 10-year-old
girl.”
It rains six
months of the year in Freetown, one of the world’s wettest cities, and putrid
water from its populated slopes inundate its coastal slums every summer
bringing cholera, dysentery and respiratory infections.
At least 20
neighbourhoods were flooded by the five-hour storm, according to a statement
from the presidency, which said torrential monsoon rain was expected to
continue for at least six days.
Police and
soldiers were deployed to the worst-hit areas to maintain law and order, it
said, while residents were being urged to stay at home.
A doctor told AFP
rainwater had inundated six wards in the Connaught, the country’s largest
hospital, forcing patients to be moved to makeshift treatment areas.
“We were able to
contain the situation as we admitted over 100 people for abrasions, shock and
hypothermia, while about 40 were treated and discharged,” a separate medical
source told AFP.
Mohamed Sillah, a
worker at the Brookfields National Stadium, said over 600 people had sought
refuge by 7:30 am (0730 GMT).
The
45,000-capacity Brookfields, home to the national football team, is one of two
Freetown sports grounds where emergency services were telling people to seek
refuge.
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