Brazil continues search for dozens missing after deadly floods

Search is concentrated in mountainous coastal municipality of Sao Sebastiao, where 43 deaths have been recorded, officials of Sao Paulo state say.

Rio-Santos highway, which connects the cities of Rio de Janeiro and Santos is blocked by mudslides triggered by heavy rains near the Barra do Sahi beach in the coastal city of Sao Sebastiao.
AP

Rio-Santos highway, which connects the cities of Rio de Janeiro and Santos is blocked by mudslides triggered by heavy rains near the Barra do Sahi beach in the coastal city of Sao Sebastiao.

Rescuers in southeastern Brazil have scrambled to find survivors among dozens of people still missing after record rainfalls caused flooding and mudslides that killed at least 44 people over the weekend.

"Search and rescue work continues uninterrupted" after raging rivers of mud, stones and trees razed precarious houses built on slopes, according to the office of Sao Paulo's governor.

But the wet weather complicated the work of some 1,000 search and rescue personnel, backed by 50 vehicles, 14 helicopters and 53 engineering teams.

"We don’t know where the death toll will end," Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas told AFP after arriving by helicopter to visit the area.

Officially, 38 people are reported as missing, a figure that will likely push the final toll closer to 70, he added.

Authorities said more than 1,730 people had been temporarily evacuated from their homes while at least 760 were left homeless.

Twenty-five people, including six children, were taken to the hospital and seven were in serious condition.

Sao Sebastiao officials set up a tent for a collective wake for victims.

Some 680 millimetres of rain — more than double the expected monthly amount — fell in 24 hours around the popular beach city of Sao Sebastiao, some 200 kilometres southeast of Sao Paulo.

This was a record downpour, according to the state government.

As the Inmet weather service said rains would continue falling in the region this week, officials raised the official death toll to 44.

$6,000 helicopter rides

Residents with shovels and hoes cleaned mud out of their homes as heavy vehicles passed by outside to collect debris.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva flew over the holiday zone-turned-disaster area on Monday and warned about the dangers of improvised urban construction.

An estimated 9.5 million of Brazil's 215 million people live in areas at high risk of flooding or landslides — often in impoverished favelas.

With many roads still blocked by boulders and mud, some vacationers were evacuated by boat as intense helicopter traffic continued to and from the most affected areas.

The authorities urged tourists to leave the coastal areas, and Brazilian media reported that some tourists paid as much as almost $6,000 for a helicopter ride out.

"There was no way to go anywhere," said Gabriel Bonavides, who was spending his holiday in a rented house with friends when disaster struck.

"We left the car there and had to return by boat," the 19-year-old law student told the AFP news agency.

Residents of nearby Juquehy, still shaken by the weekend storm, spent another night in anguish when rains caused fresh landslides early on Tuesday.

Some 80 people fled their homes but no casualties were reported, according to authorities.

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