âItâs almost a warlike situation,â Rio de Janeiro Gov. Cláudio Castro said at a news briefing. âAll of our teams are mobilized: firefighters, departments and all other state agencies.â
Castro said it was âthe greatest rain since 1932,â characterizing the catastrophe as so rare that it was difficult to take preventive measures.
Emergency responders have rescued 24 people, officials said, and at least 400 have been left homeless. Rio de Janeiroâs public prosecutorsâ office said Wednesday night that it had compiled a list of 35 people who remain missing, the Associated Press reported. Authorities have called in heavy machinery to help dig through the rubble.
Rescue workers evacuated another community in Petrópolis Thursday after a fresh landslide threatened the area, Brazilian media reported. There were no confirmed casualties.
Civil defense authorities warned of more heavy rain Thursday, urging people in at-risk areas to move to safer sites.
For Brazil, which battles flooding and landslides every year during rainy season, the scenes from Petrópolis were painfully familiar, recalling a 2011 disaster that killed more than 900 in the same area. More recently, landslides in two states â Minas Gerais and São Paulo â led to more than 40 deaths in January, and they came just weeks after flooding in Bahia state left at least 21 dead and thousands displaced.
The countryâs heavily populated southeast has proved especially vulnerable, and experts say climate change is exacerbating this deadly extreme weather.
Petrópolis, located about 40 miles northeast of Rio de Janeiro city, was founded in the 1840s by Brazilian Emperor Pedro II, who sought respite there from the scorching summer heat, and the region has remained a more temperate refuge. Petrópolis was one of the countryâs first planned cities, but the population has since grown vertically, building precarious homes atop mountains that are especially at risk during downpours.
Images from this weekâs rain and its aftermath showed torrents of water whipping through the cityâs steep streets. It flooded public squares, inundating shops and homes. The mud overturned cars and swept aside structures.
Petrópolis Mayor Rubens Bomtempo said his city is âgoing through an extremely grave situation.â
âIt was a difficult day, very complicated, even to understand the alterations happening in the territory,â Bomtempo said at a briefing. âUp to now, we donât have a definitive dimensionâ of the damage done.
President Jair Bolsonaro, on a state visit to Russia, said he has spoken to local leaders and is âcommitted to helping others.â
âGod comfort the families of the victims,â Bolsonaro said on Twitter.
First responders have set up a field hospital and a shelter, and a convoy of government trucks has been delivering aid supplies, including food, clothing and medicine, said Angela Góes, a spokesperson for the state civil defense ministry. More than 180 people still living in high-risk areas, which authorities fear could still be vulnerable in another storm, have been moved to local schools, she said.
The search-and-rescue effort â which included hundreds of firefighters, military police and nine helicopters â also drew residents, who combed the piles looking for loved ones and neighbors.
Rosilene Virgilio, 49, told the Associated Press she heard someone pleading for help, screaming, âGet me out of here!â
âBut we couldnât do anything; the water was gushing out, the mud was gushing out,â Virgilio said. âOur city unfortunately is finished.â
Brazilâs Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga flew over the affected areas Thursday and pledged to provide the population with assistance. Luiz Fux, president of Brazilâs supreme court, also announced that the countryâs judicial council would collect donations for the victims, local media reported.
âHundreds of families have lost their homes and their possessions. It will not be easy to rebuild the city,â Fux said.
Claire Parker contributed to this report, which has been updated.
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