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Deadly rainstorms paralyze Sao Paulo

A huge tree lies in a flooded area at Marginal Tiete highway during a heavy rain, in northern Sao Paulo, Brazil, on December 8, 2009. Hours of non-stop rain caused at least four deaths and brought traffic on key cross-city roads to a standstill in Sao Paulo, with 120 kilometers (80 miles) in total of stopped traffic in the city. Vehicles were brought to a standstill on the Marginal highways that serve as the main north-south and east-west thoroughfares in Sao Paulo because of flooding from the adjacent Tiete and Pinheiros Rivers. Photo courtesy AFP

Six killed in Indonesian flash floods
Jakarta (AFP) Dec 8, 2009 - At least six people were killed and four seriously injured when flash floods hit villages in Indonesia's North Sulawesi province Tuesday, an official said. The early morning floods were unleashed after two days of torrential rain, and smashed through four villages in Siau Timur district. "At least 34 houses were swept away by powerful waters that hit around 1:00 am (1700 GMT Monday) and three bridges collapsed," Priyadi Kardono, a spokesman for the national disaster management centre, told AFP. He said the floods had displaced some 700 local residents who were now sheltering in local administration office buildings. "There are no people missing in this incident," the spokesman said, adding that aid including food was on the way to the affected area. Activists have warned that logging and a failure to reforest denuded land are often to blame for the frequent floods that hit the world's fourth-most populous country.
by Staff Writers
Sao Paulo (AFP) Dec 8, 2009
Heavy rain brought Brazil's biggest city of Sao Paulo grinding to a halt on Tuesday and reportedly claimed the lives of six people in landslides.

The bodies of four brothers aged five to 20 were recovered by firemen from a house that crumbled apart in one landslide in a northwestern suburb, CBN radio, Globo Television and the Terra news website all said.

Reports also said two more people died in other parts of the city, while authorities evacuated 22 homes in an eastern suburb because of fear the ground there could shift too.

The persistent rain brought traffic on key cross-city highways to a standstill as the adjacent Tiete and Pinheiros rivers broke their banks.

Television images showed trucks and motorbikes driving through long stretches of water-covered roads, while vehicles piled up for kilometers (miles) on other impassable routes.

Access to the city's international airport of Guarulhos was difficult, with the main road to the facility cut off.

The Climatempo weather service said it was the heaviest 24-hour period of rainfall Sao Paulo had seen all year. Overnight alone, the city received half of its total average December precipitation.

The state Emergency Administration Center declared an alert, saying the rain would continue with "light to moderate intensity," creating the "potential for new flooding."

Sao Paulo mayor Gilberto Kassab assured reporters that his services were prepared to handle the consequences of the bad weather, and he denied repeated accusations that lack of investment in water canalization was to blame.

Farther south, 161 towns in the state of Rio Grande do Sul bordering Uruguay declared a state of emergency because of the rain. The region had already been lashed by storms over the past few weeks that killed eight people and forced 14,000 from their homes.

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More bodies found as Saudi flood death toll rises to 116
Riyadh (AFP) Dec 7, 2009
Three more bodies have been found more than a week after a flash flood hit the Saudi city of Jeddah, raising the death toll to 116, the official news agency SPA reported on Monday. Forty-seven people are still missing and more than 22,000 people have been displaced after their homes were destroyed or damaged in the November 25 flood, said Jeddah civil defence official Mohammed al-Qarni ... read more







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