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South Africa floods toll ‘around 70’

Around 70 people have been killed in devastating floods in South Africa, an official said on Thursday, while 1,000 people have been forced from their homes.

This picture taken on April 24, 2019 shows a local resident standing over debris at the Quarry road informal settlement after torrential rains and flash floods in Durban. – The driver was declared dead on the scene. The death toll from floods and mudslides that crushed homes in the South African port of Durban on April 22 has risen to 51, with reports of children missing and scores of people displaced, local authorities said. (Photo by RAJESH JANTILAL / AFP)

Around 70 people have been killed in devastating floods in South Africa, an official said on Thursday, while 1,000 people have been forced from their homes.

Heavy rains have lashed the southeast of the country, tearing down homes and ravaging infrastructure in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) and Eastern Cape provinces.

The acting leader of KZN province, which includes port city Durban, Sihle Zikalala said: “we are worried and quite devastated by the increase of the number of fatalities”.

“We’re now told that the number (of fatalities) is getting around 70. The final figure will be released during the day,” he said at a media briefing.

“It is the first time in KZN that we experience such a loss of people, that we lose people in such a great number.”

President Cyril Ramaphosa visited the deluged province on Wednesday and pledged government funds to help those affected by the extreme weather.

Emergency responders have reported collapsed buildings and flooded roads blocked sewer lines and toppled electricity pylons.

“So all this part it just fell… We only have two survivors, one of them is my son and the other friend,” said Ntombi Ztombi Zama whose sister was killed in a landslide at a property in Chatsworth, south of Durban.

“When I came and I see everything demolished it just broke me. It was bad.”

South African military personnel have been dispatched to help rescue and evacuation efforts.

The South African Weather Service has warned that more heavy rain and gale force winds are on the way.

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