â(Iâm looking for) my nephew, his wife and a 2-year-old child,â Cicero Pereira, 54, told The Associated Press beside a disaster site in the city of Franco da Rocha. âThey said the bodies are still there under the mud, but until now they couldnât recover them.â
Nelito Santos Bonfim, a 69-year-old resident, told AP he barely escaped with his life.
âWhen I started running, the debris fell all over me,â Bonfim said. âI got hurt, but found a hole and, thanks to God, I managed to escape. But my father is still there.â
A total 27 cities were affected, of which Franco da Rocha suffered the greatest loss of life. Gov. João Doria used a helicopter to survey damaged areas Sunday and announced the equivalent of $2.8 million in financial aid to affected cities.
Alessandro Lima de Freitas, a coordinator for firefighters working to retrieve bodies, updated his list of missing people in Franco da Rocha. He told reporters that the concentration of rain was much heavier than locals are used to.
Southeastern Brazil has been punished with heavy rains since the start of the year, with 19 deaths recorded in Minas Gerais state earlier this month.
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