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Floods and mudslides leave 100 dead in Myanmar

BBC
Residents rescuing their property and animals after heavy floods. PHOTO/@Kim_Jolliffe/X
Residents rescuing their property and animals after heavy floods. PHOTO/@Kim_Jolliffe/X

More than 100 individuals have died in flooding and mudslides caused by the remnants of Typhoon Yagi in Myanmar.

Spokesman for the nation’s ruling junta, Zaw Min Tun, said in a statement on Sunday that 113 others had been confirmed dead, with a further 64 missing – though regional reports suggest the true toll may be higher.

Meanwhile, over 320,000 individuals have been forced to leave to temporary shelters, according to the AFP news agency.

Yagi, Asia’s most powerful storm this year, has already proved devastating as it swept across Vietnam, Laos, the Chinese island of Hainan and the Philippines.

At least 287 individuals were thought to have died as a result of the storm before it reached Myanmar.

While the typhoon has been downgraded to a tropical depressìon since making landfall in northern Vietnam, it has continued to cause landslides across south-east Asia.

In Myanmar, state media reports that nearly 66,000 houses had been destroyed as of Friday evening, along with 375 schools and a monastery. Several miles of road and other infrastructure have been washed away.

Also as of Friday, more than 236,000 others were being accommodated at 187 relief camps.

The impacts of heavy rainfall have centred on the Kayah, Kayin, Mandalay, Mon, and Shan states – which cover the central region of Myanmar.

Some say the number of deaths is already far higher than official estimates.

Radio Free Asia, a US-backed broadcaster, reported that at least 160 had died in Myanmar – with social media accounts loyal to the ruling junta suggesting 230 individuals had died in the Mandalay region alone.

Japan’s state broadcaster, NHK, reported that more than 120 individuals had died as of Saturday.

In Kalaw, a hill town in the Shan state, at least 12 persons had died as of Saturday, one of whom was eight years old, the privately-owned Eleven Myanmar news website reported.

One man told AFP how he had tried to rescue individuals with ropes, as floodwaters 4m (15 ft) high surged through the town on 10 September.

“I could see families in the distance standing on the roofs of their houses,” he said.

“I heard there were 40 bodies in the hospital.”

A lady who runs a company in Kalaw claimed her staff had said 60 had died in the town, AFP reported.

Myanmar has had a three-year civil fight since a junta seized power in 2021. The UN estimates that thousands have been killed and 2.6 million inhabitants have been displaced by the conflict.

The Shan state is also home to several insurgent groups, some of which have de facto control over some of its territory.

Myanmar’s information ministry says emergency and health workers have been deployed to areas affected by floods, and that it has provided funds for food and drinking water for evacuees.

Emergency responders have also begun repairing damaged roads and bridges, state media reports.

Scientists say typhoons and hurricanes are becoming stronger and more frequent with climate change. Warmer ocean waters mean storms pick up more energy, leading to higher wind speeds.

A warmer atmosphere can also hold more moisture, which can lead to more intense rainfall.

Yagi is expected to move away from Myanmar in the coming days. Another tropical depressìon is forecast to develop in the western Pacific in the coming week.

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