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    Libya floods: UN says most casualties could have been avoided, as thousands more feared dead



    CNN
     — 

    The United Nations has said most of the deaths in flash floods that tore through Libya could have been “avoided,” as relief workers struggle to deliver crucial aid in a humanitarian effort stifled by political divisions and debris from the disaster.

    At least 5,000 people have died in Libya, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Thursday, revising an earlier estimate of 8,000. Thousands more are feared missing after entire buildings were “wiped out” when a seven-meter wave hit the northern coastal city of Derna, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Thursday.

    The unprecedented rainfall engulfed cities in the North African nation last week, rupturing two dams in the country’s northeast and sending a deluge of water to Derna, which has seen the worst of the devastation.

    “If there would have been a normally operating meteorological service, they would have issued the warnings and also the emergency management of this would have been able to carry out evacuations of the people and we would have avoided most of the human casualties,” Petteri Taalas, the UN’s World Meteorological Organization (WMO) secretary-general, told reporters in a news conference in Geneva on Thursday.

    “Of course, we cannot fully avoid economic losses but we could’ve also minimized those losses by having proper services in place,” Talaas added.

    Talaas said the WMO has tried to interact with Libyan officials on improving these mechanisms, but because the “security situation in the country is so difficult, it is difficult to go there.”

    Libya has been riven by political turmoil since civil war erupted in 2014, and now has two rival governments, the eastern parliament-backed government in Benghazi and the internationally recognized government in Tripoli.

    Each has reported conflicting numbers for victims following the catastrophic floods in the country. CNN is unable to independently verify the number of deaths or those missing.

    The head of the ICRC’s Libya delegation said it will take “many months, maybe years,” for residents in Derna to recover from the scale of damage, after a seven-meter wave thrashed the northern coastal city this week.

    “This disaster was violent and brutal. A wave 7 metres high wiped-out buildings and washed infrastructure into the sea. Now family members are missing, dead bodies are washing back up on shore, and homes are destroyed,” Yann Fridez said.

    “It will take many months, maybe years, for residents to recover from this huge level of damage.”

    The ICRC had a team in Derna to support families with micro-economic activities when the floodwaters overwhelmed the city, adding it will distribute 6,000 body bags to forensic teams in the eastern city of Benghazi to “ensure dignified treatment of the dead.”

    Access to the flood-hit areas remains a “major challenge” because roads were destroyed, the ICRC said.


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    Libya’s former health minister Reida El Oakley told CNN’s Becky Anderson on Wednesday that “a huge wave, as high as a six-story building or higher, swept the whole country as a single wave tsunami.”

    Khaled Al-Shuwaihed, a Libyan citizen, said the situation in Derna “was a catastrophe.”

    “It was a catastrophe, all of my friends are dead,” al-Shuwaihed told Reuters on Thursday.

    “One of my friends at the very beginning was filming from the top of the valley, my friend, he was filming, he died. Someone named Nasir Fatoury and his children (are said to be dead) but these are all rumors at this point, nothing has been confirmed. One of my friends and his five children, only one of them found us.”

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    People look at damaged areas of Derna, Libya, on Thursday, September 14.

    Abdullah Doma/AFP/Getty Images

    A helicopter flies over Derna on September 14.

    Abdullah Doma/AFP/Getty Images

    A man carries a child on his shoulder as he walks past a flood-damaged area on September 14.

    Yousef Murad/AP

    Toys are scattered outside a damaged house on September 14.

    Abdullah Doma/AFP/Getty Images

    A mosque stands amid damaged buildings on September 14.

    Abdullah Doma/AFP/Getty Images

    People carry some of their belongings as they walk along a muddy street on September 14.

    Yousef Murad/AP

    Bodies of flooding victims are transported in Derna on Wednesday, September 13.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    A search-and-rescue team from the Egyptian army looks at damaged cars in Derna on September 13.

    Ahmed Elumami/Reuters

    A body is carried away in Derna on September 13.

    Yousef Murad/AP

    People search for survivors in Derna on September 13.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    Buildings are damaged in Derna on September 13.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    Rescuers inspect damaged areas in Derna on September 13.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    People walk between the rubble in Derna on September 13.

    Muhammad J. Elalwany/AP

    An overhead view of the flood damage in Derna on September 13.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    Members of the Libyan Red Crescent walk in Derna on September 13.

    Yousef Murad/AP

    Workers bury the bodies of flood victims in Derna on September 13.

    Jamal Alkomaty/AP

    An aerial view of Derna on Tuesday, September 12.

    Jamal Alkomaty/AP

    A road is collapsed in Derna on September 12.

    Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

    A man sits amid flood debris in Derna on September 12.

    Abdullah Mohammed Bonja/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

    A damaged vehicle is partially buried in Derna on September 12.

    Abdullah Mohammed Bonja/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

    People cover the body of a victim in Derna on September 12.

    Planet Labs PBC/AP

    This satellite photo shows the extent of Derna’s flooding on September 12.

    Omar Jarhman/Reuters

    People stand on a damaged road in Shahhat, Libya, on Monday, September 11.

    AFP/Getty Images

    People make their way through a damaged area of Derna on September 11.

    AFP/Getty Images

    Toys are strewn across the ground at a damaged store in Derna on September 11.

    Ali Al-Saadi/Reuters

    Floodwaters cover Shahhat on September 11.

    AFP/Getty Images

    Overturned cars are piled in a street in Derna on September 11.

    AFP/Getty Images

    The body of a flood victim lies in the back of a pickup truck in Derna on September 11.

    Libyab government/Handout/AP

    A seaside road is collapsed in Derna on September 11.

    More grave diggers are desperately required in Derna, human rights activists said, as they struggled to contain the number of bodies that need burying.

    Abu Bakr Al-Rifadi told Libyan state news agency LANA that “the torrent waters caused the city of Derna to be divided into western and eastern halves.”


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    Ali Al-Ghazali, who runs the Namaa Organization in Derna, said the torrents annihilated at least 25% of the city.

    He told CNN the city center – where all the shops, clinics, schools, main roads and historical sites are located – “was the hardest hit.”

    “It is totally destroyed. Right now, foreign teams are in the city to try to help. But unfortunately, there are way too many dead bodies in the streets. Now, on the third day, most bodies are decomposing. The smell of death is in the air,” al-Ghazali added.

    “I lost relatives in the flooding. My wife’s first cousins. Entire families were killed. My wife is undergoing cancer treatment. After the flooding, we moved her to Benghazi, so that she could continue her treatment.”

    Medical volunteers said they were overwhelmed by the scale of human disaster in Derna, as aid slowly began to arrive on Thursday amid fears of waterborne diseases.

    More than 30,000 people have been displaced in Derna, the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Wednesday. Meanwhile bodies piled up near defunct health facilities, despite the need to treat survivors of the disaster.

    Khaled Hamid, the general manager at a Libyan NGO, said aid donations were inadequate for the number of people needing treatment.

    “The first step was easy, we collected money from equipments and donations from inside and outside the organization. We didn’t expect that people would sympathize with us to this extent, and thank God we received very good support,” Hamid told Reuters.

    “This is a drop in the ocean of the needs we need for Derna, but we saw while coming here that people are coming here from different cities of Libya, from Misrata, Tripoli, Zawiya, from every city.”


    View this interactive content on CNN.com

    On Thursday, the marine port into Derna became accessible for ships with a minimum draft level of 6.5 meters to deliver humanitarian aid to the badly damaged area, the Libyan Ports and Maritime Transport Authority said.

    A committee has been established to improve operations at the port, the statement said, adding that the primary objective is to expedite the aid delivery to the region.

    The Ministry of Transport is led by the internationally recognized government in, Tripoli, in west Libya, led by Dbeibeh.

    International leaders from countries including Tunisia, Turkey, Algeria, Italy, and Saudi Arabia pledged donations, but questions remain over how aid will reach parts of Libya controlled by rival forces.

    At least $71.4 million is needed to respond to the 884,000 people estimated to be affected by the floods, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Thursday. A combination of pre-existing humanitarian conditions, the dire socio-economic status in Libya and logistical constraints is hampering aid efforts.

    The World Health Organization will release $2 million from its emergency fund, according to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

    On Thursday, the World Food Programme said it started distributing food to more than 5,000 families displaced. Earlier this week, at least 2,000 people who had fled from Derna to Benghazi received aid from WFP’s partner LibAid.

    Libya’s eastern leader, Osama Hamad, said his government allocated 10 billion Libyan Dinars (almost $2.1 billion) from its emergency budget to support affected regions.

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