The most devastating floods to hit Bolivia in 25 years have cut off a
northeastern city, and local officials said on Thursday that more rain
forecast for the coming days could put residents at greater risk.
Aid is starting to arrive after nearly three months of heavy rains,
which have killed at least 35 people, destroyed thousands of homes, and
mangled crops and roads throughout much of the South American nation.
Most of the sparsely populated Beni region, which is roughly the size of
the United Kingdom, is under water, and its capital, Trinidad, is
surrounded by water.
Local authorities told reporters they fear that if the walls protecting
the city collapse, tragedy would ensue.
"If this happens, we are going to be in dire straits," Beni's governor,
Ernesto Suarez, was quoted as saying by local daily La Prensa. Suarez
said some 6,000 people have been evacuated from Trinidad's outskirts and
that the worst flooding is yet to come.
"They are saying the hardest blow will come after the 28th (of
February). If this happens, Trinidad will be in serious trouble," he was
quoted as saying.
Local TV networks broadcast dramatic images of people being evacuated in
run-down dinghies in Beni, carrying whatever household belongings they
could rescue from their homes.
The national weather service forecasts more rain throughout the country
over the next few days.
The government says some 350,000 Bolivians are suffering the hardships
of extreme weather triggered by El Nino, an oscillation of
marine-atmospheric systems characterized by warm surface waters in the
eastern Pacific, a phenomenon that may be aggravated by global warming.
Flooding has also affected the eastern province of Santa Cruz, the
country's agricultural heartland.
The region's farming chamber said nearly 200,000 hectares (494,000
acres) of crops -- including 155,000 hectares (383,000 acres) of soy,
the country's main agricultural export -- have been destroyed by flooding.
Aid from countries including the United States, Italy, Venezuela, Peru
and Argentina, is pouring in. But the destruction to the roads and the
country's shortage of aircraft mean it cannot reach many of the affected
areas.
(
Planet Ark, 23/02/2007)