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4 killed in flash floods in Yemen's historic Tarim city
by AFP Staff Writers
Tarim, Yemen (AFP) May 3, 2021

Four people have been killed in flash floods following heavy rains in the historic Yemeni city of Tarim, state media said Monday.

The city, located in the central province of Hadramawt, is best known for its mud-brick structures and more than 360 mosques including Al-Mehdar, which has the tallest minaret in the country.

The state-run Saba news agency reported four dead and an unspecified number of injured as a result of heavy rains on Sunday, and said three residences had collapsed.

AFP footage showed streets of the city flooded and mud-brick buildings damaged, with vehicles and motorcycles buried under debris and mud.

Residents said the victims' bodies were transported to hospital.

"I pulled my children out of the building, and rescue teams came and transported us to a school to take shelter," Saeed al-Mas, whose house was destroyed, told AFP.

Dozens of people are killed every year across Yemen in flash floods.

Fierce storms have added to the woes of the war-torn country, which the UN has described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions pushed to the brink of famine in the years-long conflict between the government -- supported by a Saudi-led military coalition -- and the Iran-backed Huthi rebels.

Local authorities have said that due to the conflict, they have struggled to raise funds to maintain historic sites in the impoverished country.


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Stanford researchers reveal that homes in floodplains are overvalued by nearly $44 billion
Stanford CA (SPX) Apr 28, 2021
Buyer beware: single-family homes in floodplains - almost 4 million U.S. homes - are overvalued by nearly $44 billion collectively or $11,526 per house on average, according to a new Stanford University-led study. The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, suggests that unaware buyers and inadequate disclosure laws drive up financial risks that could destabilize the real estate market. The threat is likely to grow as climate change drives more frequent extreme weather. ... read more

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