Ethiopian flood toll climbs to 221 as hope for missing fade Dire Dawa, Ethiopia, Aug 9, 2006 Rescue workers have recovered at least 22 bodies in their search for hundreds of people missing from weekend flash floods that devastated an Ethiopian town, officials said Wednesday. The recovery brought the death toll from flooding in the eastern town of Dire Dawa and outlying areas to at least 221, but frantic rescue efforts were continuing even as hopes faded for some 300 people still unaccounted for. Officials said search teams had managed to retrieve 10 more bodies Wednesday after 11 were recovered the previous day. "We have recovered 10 bodies since morning and this raises the official death toll to 221. This figure has been confirmed by the police and the hospital," Dire Dawa police commissioner Getachew Asers told reporters. The officials, however, said that it was difficult to identify the bodies as they had began decomposing, causing a pile-up in the hospital. "The bodies recovered yesterday and on Monday were mangled and already decomposing. It is quite difficult to identify them and this makes it difficult for the medical team and the waiting families," Red Cross programme coordinator Gebregiorgis Gebremicheal told AFP. Earlier, Police Inspector Beniam Fikru said the toll was expected to rise because the figure accounted only for deaths confirmed by the authorities. Many victims had been buried quickly by relatives rather than brought to hospitals. "This death toll is only of those who are confirmed by the hospital and the police. It does not include those who are buried by family members that were not brought to hospital," he said. More than 300 soldiers have been dispatched to Dire Dawa, about 500 kilometres (300 miles) east of the capital Addis Ababa, to help clear debris and reinforce the rescue and search teams. The search operation had been extended to 40 kilometers (25 miles) downstream, where officials said more bodies might have been washed or buried under the sand. "The search for more bodies is going on today, as far as 30-40 kilometres downstream and in suspect areas of the river bed," Beniam said. Exhausted security forces and aid workers continued to dig through mud, sand and debris with heavy equipment, garden tools and even their bare hands in the search for bodies. Some 10,000 people are believed to have been left homeless after the two rivers broke their banks during heavy rains and swept through the town in the flood-prone Ethiopian lowlands. The government and humanitarian teams were struggling to deliver supplies to the displaced, who are camped in schools and other public buildings in the township. Witnesses said crowds of people crammed into makeshift mortuaries and overwhelmed hospitals in search for missing loved ones. Ethiopia, an impoverished nation of about 70 million people, is frequently ravaged by natural disasters, notably drought. In the past few years, flooding has affected large areas of eastern and southern Ethiopia, displacing tens of thousands of people and causing damage running into millions of dollars, particularly to agriculture. Last year, at least 200 people were killed and more than 260,000 displaced when heavy rains pounded the region. Survivors were forced to cling to trees to escape being eaten by crocodiles. In neighbouring Kenya, flash floods killed at least six people and displaced hundreds in the past three days, officials said. Hundreds of livestock were also swept away. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters When the Earth Quakes A world of storm and tempest
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