Communications Outage Hampers Flood Rescue Teams in Derna

Communications Outage Hampers Flood Rescue Teams in Derna

A daylong communication‌ outage in the flood-stricken city‌ of Derna in ‍eastern Libya has further complicated the⁢ work of teams searching for bodies under the rubble and at sea.

The country’s chief ⁣prosecutor, meanwhile, vowed to take “serious measures” to deliver justice ⁤for the victims of the floods, which killed thousands⁤ of people ‍and devastated the coastal city ⁣more than a week ago.

‘I never thought we would survive’: Derna after the delugeRead more

The outage was⁢ caused when fibre-optic cables were severed on Tuesday, Libya’s state-owned telecommunications company said. Engineers were investigating to determine ​whether​ it happened because of digging for bodies or was sabotage, the company’s spokesperson, Mohamed al-Bdairi, told ⁣a local ​television station.

Internet and phone service ⁣were knocked out, and residents and journalists were unable to⁤ reach those ⁢inside Derna.⁣ Authorities said communications with the‍ city were restored on Wednesday evening.

Heavy rains triggered deadly ​flooding across eastern Libya earlier this month. The storm overwhelmed two dams in ‌the first hours of 11 September, sending a wall of water several metres high through the centre of Derna, destroying entire neighbourhoods ‍and sweeping⁢ people out ‍to sea.

The floods inundated as much as a quarter of the city, officials⁣ have said. Thousands of people were killed, with many dead ⁤still under the‍ rubble or at⁣ sea, according⁤ to search teams. Government officials and aid​ agencies have ​given varied death tolls ranging from about 4,000 to more than 11,000.

At least 40,000 ⁤people were displaced⁤ in the area, including 30,000 in Derna, according ‍to the UN’s ⁣migration agency. Many people have moved⁤ to other cities ​across Libya, hosted by local communities or sheltered in schools.

Local authorities said they have isolated the worst damaged part of Derna amid growing concerns about potential infection by waterborne​ diseases. Health authorities have launched a vaccination campaign that ​initially targeted search and rescue teams along ​with children in Derna and other affected areas.

Hundreds of angry⁢ protesters gathered outside the main ⁤mosque in Derna on Monday. They lashed ⁣out at the political class that has controlled Libya since the ⁣ousting and killing of longtime dictator Muammar ⁢Gaddafi in a 2011 Nato-supported uprising.

The protesters ​demanded an investigation into the disaster to be accelerated and called for the reconstruction of Derna to be under United Nations supervision.

Eastern Libya orders journalists out of flood-hit Derna after protestsRead more

The general prosecutor al-Sidiq al-Sour has launched an investigation into the collapse of the​ two dams in Derna. In comments to a local television station on Wednesday, he vowed to take “serious measures” to deliver justice for the‍ victims of the floods.

“It’s a great catastrophe, and ‍the casualty toll ​is significant. Certainly, if measures ⁤had‍ been taken at the right time in the past years, a catastrophe with…

2023-09-20 15:31:49
Article from www.theguardian.com
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