Current:Home > ContactLibya flooding presents "unprecedented humanitarian crisis" after decade of civil war left it vulnerable -BrightFuture Investments
Libya flooding presents "unprecedented humanitarian crisis" after decade of civil war left it vulnerable
View
Date:2025-04-14 12:45:02
Libya's eastern port city Derna was home to some 100,000 people before Mediterranian storm Daniel unleashed torrents of floodwater over the weekend. But as residents and emergency workers continued sifting Wednesday through mangled debris to collect the bodies of victims of the catastrophic flooding, officials put the death toll in Derna alone at more than 5,100.
The International Organization for Migration said Wednesday that at least 30,000 individuals had been displaced from homes in Derna due to flood damage.
But the devastation stretched across a wide swath of northern Libya, and the Red Cross said Tuesday that some 10,000 people were still listed as missing in the affected region.
The IOM said another 6,085 people were displaced in other storm-hit areas, including the city of Benghazi.
Harrowing videos spread across social media showing bodies carpeting some parts of Derna as buildings lay in ruins.
"The death toll is huge and around 10,000 are reported missing," Tamer Ramadan, head of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies delegation in Libya said Tuesday.
More than 2,000 bodies had been collected as of Wednesday morning. More than half of them were quickly buried in mass graves in Derna, according to Othman Abduljaleel, the health minister for the government that runs eastern Libya, the Associated Press reported.
But Libya effectively has two governments – one in the east and one in the west – each backed by various well-armed factions and militias. The North African nation has writhed through violence and chaos amid a civil war since 2014, and that fragmentation could prove a major hurdle to getting vital international aid to the people who need it most in the wake of the natural disaster.
Coordinating the distribution of aid between the separate administrations — and ensuring it can be done safely in a region full of heavily armed militias and in the absence of a central government — will be a massive challenge.
The strife that has followed in the wake of ousted dictator Muammar Qaddafi's 2011 killing had already left Libya's crumbling infrastructure severely vulnerable. So when the storm swelled water levels and caused two dams to burst in Derna over the weekend, it swept "entire neighborhoods… into the sea," according to the World Meteorological Organization.
In addition to hampering relief efforts and leaving the infrastructure vulnerable, the political vacuum has also made it very difficult to get accurate casualty figures.
The floods destroyed electricity and communications infrastructure as well as key roads into Derna. Of seven roads leading to the city, only two were left intact as torrential rains caused continuing flash floods across the region.
Margaret Harris, spokesperson for the U.N.'s World Health Organization said Tuesday that the flooding was of "epic proportions" and estimated that the torrential rains had affected as many as 1.8 million people, wiping out some hospitals.
The International Rescue Committee has called the natural disaster "an unprecedented humanitarian crisis," alluding to the storm damage that had created obstacles to rescue work.
In Derna alone, "challenges are immense, with phone lines down and heavy destruction hampering rescue efforts," Ciaran Donelly, the organization's senior vice president for crisis response, said in a statement emailed to CBS News.
- In:
- Red Cross
- Africa
- Civil War
- United Nations
- Libya
- Flooding
- Flash Flooding
veryGood! (13)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- 61,000 gun safes recalled for security issue after report of 12-year-old child's death
- Desperate and disaffected, Argentines to vote whether upstart Milei leads them into the unknown
- 3 are indicted on fraud-related charges in a Medicaid billing probe in Arizona
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Powerball winning numbers from Oct. 18 drawing: Jackpot at $70 million
- Brooke Burke Sets the Record Straight on Those Derek Hough Affair Comments
- 'Wake up, you have to see this!': 77-year-old Oregon man wins $1 million Powerball prize
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Aid deal brings hope to hungry Gaza residents, but no food yet
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Phoenix Mercury hire head coach with no WNBA experience. But hey, he's a 'Girl Dad'
- European court says Italy violated rights of residents near Naples over garbage crisis
- DIARY: Under siege by Hamas militants, a hometown and the lives within it are scarred forever
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- 3 are indicted on fraud-related charges in a Medicaid billing probe in Arizona
- Jon Bon Jovi named MusiCares Person of the Year. How he'll be honored during Grammys Week
- French presidential couple attend funeral service of teacher slain in school attack
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Man accused of bringing guns to Wisconsin Capitol now free on signature bond, can’t possess weapons
Erin Foster Accuses Chad Michael Murray of Cheating on Her With Sophia Bush
New shark species discovered in Mammoth Cave National Park fossils, researchers say
Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
Fortress recalls 61,000 biometric gun safes after 12-year-old dies
Martin Scorsese on new movie ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’: ‘Maybe we’re all capable of this’
So-called toddler milks are unregulated and unnecessary, a major pediatrician group says