Space News from SpaceDaily.com
In southern Brazil, flood victims cope with total loss
Gravataí, Brazil, May 4 (AFP) May 04, 2024
When Claudio Almiro finally abandoned his ruined home in flood-ravaged southern Brazil, he found himself slogging through waist-deep water.

The 55-year-old with a grizzled goatee, emaciated face and tired features, took refuge in a cultural center in Gravatai, a northern suburb of Porto Alegre, the capital of Rio Grande do Sul.

He is one of more than 8,000 residents of this state who fled to shelters after abandoning their homes due to the torrential rains that have left some forty people dead and dozens missing.

Almiro, who is unemployed, says the disaster took his home and all his possessions.

"The water kept rising after I left, so... nothing could be saved," he says.

"Many people have even lost their lives. I raise my hand to heaven and thank God that I'm alive."

At the Vila dos Anjos cultural center, which is home to around twenty disaster victims, volunteers handed out clothes and toiletries.

Blankets, T-shirts, underwear, flip-flops, toothbrushes: Donations are piled up in the reception room and everything is carefully sorted.

"Take several pairs of socks, because if they get wet, you won't be able to dry them," a volunteer tells Almiro.

"There are several places like this in the city to take in disaster victims, but also to receive donations from citizens, which we distribute to those in need," says Juliano Rocha, head of Gravatai's social services.


- Fear of more flooding -


The New Horizons shelter, which usually houses the homeless in Gravatai, was also called upon to help.

It improvised to accommodate 51 disaster victims, in addition to the ten regular residents.

"We transformed the meeting room, lounge and dining room into bedrooms. We had to rethink the whole space to cope with this situation, turning everything upside down in just three hours," social worker Fabiana Moura says.

Next to a bunk bed, Susete Pereira, 39, takes a red blanket from a bag of donations given to her upon arrival. It also contains clothes, sanitary pads and other essentials.

"I think I've really lost everything. It's really desperate," laments Pereira, her eyes growing moist behind rose-colored glasses.

"I'm afraid of another flood in September, and we haven't even managed to get back on our feet yet."

The state of Rio Grande do Sul was also hit by extreme rainfall last year, particularly in September, when a cyclone killed more than thirty people.


ADVERTISEMENT




Space News from SpaceDaily.com
NASA, ESA will search for 'signs of life' on Mars
Boeing Starliner launch delayed to Tuesday due to helium leak
Huge Survey vs. Tiny Space Junk

24/7 Energy News Coverage
US plans to end leasing in its largest coal-producing region
New family of beautiful-charming tetraquarks predicted
ORNL develops new batteries to store renewable energy and capture CO2

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Despite Western pressure, China in no hurry to reduce Russia support
N. Korea fires ballistic missiles after denying Russia arms transfers
Taiwan's Lai to bolster 'porcupine' defence against China threat

24/7 News Coverage
For sale: unique piece of land in strategic Arctic archipelago
Daily ice loss in Greenland tracked by new GPS method
Brazil's Porto Alegre: a flood disaster waiting to happen


All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.