Current:Home > StocksSurvivors of Libya's deadly floods describe catastrophic scenes and tragic losses -FundGuru
Survivors of Libya's deadly floods describe catastrophic scenes and tragic losses
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 22:36:58
LONDON — For Ehdaa Bujeldain, an English teacher living with her family in Bab-Tobruk, in the mountains of Derna, eastern Libya, it sounded like a bomb going off in the middle of the night.
"On Sunday night, at 3 a.m., me and my family heard something like an explosion," she tells NPR by phone. "We lost electricity and connection. We didn't know what had happened. Then we heard it was a dam in Derna that had collapsed."
Four days passed with no electricity or internet, and it is only in the past couple of days that she and her family have started to learn the full extent of devastation from this week's floods.
With each day that passes, they learn of new losses — colleagues, friends and family that were killed in the floods.
"Half of the city vanished. My mum's relatives, my friends, my coworkers. They are all dead," Bujeldain says.
Najib Tarhoni, a doctor working in the nearest large hospital to Derna, in the city of Benghazi, has family members who survived the flood. They made it to safety in Benghazi, he says, but are forever changed.
"These people," he says, "are ghosts in shells. They have seen death, not just in their families but within themselves as well. Their souls are crushed, their hope is lost. How can you come back from such a thing? It's close to annihilation."
Five days on, figures vary for the number of dead from the catastrophic flooding that hit Derna. Libya's Red Crescent organization estimated Thursday that 11,300 people have died. The city's mayor said the death toll could reach 20,000.
Aid teams are arriving in the city, but their efforts have often been thwarted by damaged infrastructure and lack of access to power, water and fuel.
United Nations aid chief Martin Griffiths called the scale of the flood "appalling" and said it was a "massive reminder" of the challenges posed by climate change.
Derna is a Mediterranean coastal city bisected by a seasonal river, the Wadi Derna, that flows south from the highlands. For those living by the Wadi Derna valley, there was barely any warning before the floodwaters swept in, tsunami-like, in the early hours of Monday morning.
Nasib Almnsori is from Derna and now lives in nearby Tobruk, just over 100 miles away. He lost three cousins and their families in the flood. Other cousins who survived have come to stay with him.
The rainfall didn't seem unusual at first, he says. Every year, the Wadi Derna valley fills up with rainwater, creating the seasonal river. Family and friends were sending him videos of the rainwater in the valley on Sunday evening, just as they always have in past years.
This time though, the amount of rain from Storm Daniel was extraordinary. And then, at around 2 a.m. on Monday, two dams collapsed.
"The water reached the second floor of my cousin Seraj's house," he says. "He looked outside and saw a lot of water going into the house. He woke his family up and told them to go up onto the third floor, onto the roof, that's how they survived."
Almnsori says people living in single- or two-story houses by the Wadi Derna couldn't escape as easily.
The morning after, his brother made a difficult journey to look for relatives, confronting roads cut off by the floods. One of their cousins, 37-year-old Khadija, was missing.
"The situation was a disaster," he says. "People [were] buried under their houses. First they didn't find her, they only found her husband and the children, so they just kept looking. They didn't find her in the house because the flood took her away."
Only her five-year-old son, Fares, had survived.
"I know families where every single one of them died. No one stayed alive. Compared to my tragedy, that's really huge," Almnsori says.
Taha Muftah, a photojournalist living on the west side of Derna, spent Friday morning walking around the center and taking stock of the devastation.
"The damage is huge, unfathomable. We are begging with the world to send help, to listen to our plea," he says.
Ibrahim Ozer, with the Turkish Red Crescent organization, was part of a search and rescue team in Derna earlier in the week. He described the difficulty of transporting and delivering aid across a city split in half.
"There is one river, it is connecting east to west, all the bridges collapsed, there is no passage from one side to the other side," he says. "It's not a regular flood — it's like a storm, a flood and an earthquake."
Tarhoni, the doctor in Benghazi, warns that the most difficult weeks lie ahead.
"One catastrophe is done and there is another to come," he says. "The thousands and thousands of people who [lost everything], who lost their houses, their jobs — these people now need jobs, they need taking care of, they need psychological support."
veryGood! (24)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Rebel Wilson Shares Glimpse Into Motherhood With “Most Adorable” Daughter Royce
- Big Oil Took a Big Hit from the Coronavirus, Earnings Reports Show
- One of the world's oldest endangered giraffes in captivity, 31-year-old Twiga, dies at Texas zoo
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Colleen Ballinger faces canceled live shows and podcast after inappropriate conduct accusations
- New Arctic Council Reports Underline the Growing Concerns About the Health and Climate Impacts of Polar Air Pollution
- Orlando Aims High With Emissions Cuts, Despite Uncertain Path
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Sarah Silverman sues OpenAI and Meta over copied memoir The Bedwetter
Ranking
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Kim Kardashian Proves Her Heart Points North West With Sweet 10th Birthday Tribute
- Today's Al Roker Reflects on Health Scares in Emotional Father's Day Tribute
- Madonna says she's on the road to recovery and will reschedule tour after sudden stint in ICU
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Young Voters, Motivated by Climate Change and Environmental Justice, Helped Propel Biden’s Campaign
- Camp Pendleton Marine raped girl, 14, in barracks, her family claims
- January is often a big month for layoffs. Here's what to do in a worst case scenario
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
‘At the Forefront of Climate Change,’ Hoboken, New Jersey, Seeks Damages From ExxonMobil
Video game testers approve the first union at Microsoft
Be on the lookout for earthworms on steroids that jump a foot in the air and shed their tails
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Man found dead in Minnesota freezer was hiding from police, investigators say
This Frizz-Reducing, Humidity-Proofing Spray Is a Game-Changer for Hair and It Has 39,600+ 5-Star Reviews
Warming Trends: What Happens Once We Stop Shopping, Nano-Devices That Turn Waste Heat into Power and How Your Netflix Consumption Warms the Planet