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[ Thursday, 02 October 2008 ]
 

Around 600 homes damaged so far

Algeria floods kill 30, injure dozens

The flooding has cut off roads and rendered telephone connections erratic (File)
The flooding has cut off roads and rendered telephone connections erratic (File)

ALGIERS (AFP)

Flash floods following torrential rain south of Algiers have killed at least 29 people, injured 48 and left one person missing, the interior ministry said Thursday, warning of higher casualties.

Interior Minister Noureddine Yazid Zerhouni described them as the worst floods in a century.

"Based on the over flight that we made, the toll unfortunately could be greater," Zerhouni told reporters, after meeting local authorities in the sodden Ghardaia region.

Rain has been falling since Monday in the region, which lies about 500 kilometers (300 miles) south of Algiers.

The government previously said 13 people had been killed in the floods, which have damaged at least 600 homes, many of them in oasis areas.

The wadis, or seasonal rivers, had filled up and spilled into the larger M'zab wadi river, which then flooded, sweeping away everything in its path.

The flooding has cut off roads and rendered telephone connections erratic.

"The bakeries are shut, there is neither gas nor electricity, the shops are flooded and their stocks are probably unusable," Zerhouni said, adding the government's priority was to aid the affected population.

Ministers were to meet Thursday to assess the damage and the population's needs, the minister said.

Several areas in Algeria were lashed by heavy rain over two days including Djelfa -- midway between Ghardaia and Algiers -- where two people died.

Algeria is no stranger to bad weather, particularly in the north. Flooding in the Algiers region in 2001 killed more than 800 people and caused considerable damage.

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