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Landslides from severe rain kill 12 in Brazil’s Minas Gerais state

145 municipalities were in a state of emergency due to flooding that has already forced more than 17,000 people to leave their homes

Published: Tue 11 Jan 2022, 11:26 PM

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  • AP

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Landslides have killed at least 12 people since the weekend in Brazil’s Minas Gerais state, which has been pummeled by intense rainfall, and authorities are monitoring dams that could burst.

Firefighters in the southeastern state found five people from the same family, two of them children, buried on a hillside near the state capital, Belo Horizonte.

Two hours away by car, in the city Sao Goncalo do Rio Abaixo, a 10-year-old girl was also killed when a wall collapsed on her bedroom as she was sleeping, according to a statement from the state’s civil defense authority on Tuesday.

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Another three deaths occurred in the city of Caratinga, and in the city of Ervalia, a 20-year-old died when a landslide collapsed a bar, the bulletin said.

The state had reported two other deaths on Sunday.

It said 145 municipalities were in a state of emergency due to flooding that has already forced more than 17,000 people to leave their homes.

Parts of Minas Gerais have accumulated more than 400 millimeters (16 inches) of rain in the first 10 days of the year, according to Brazil’s Meteorology Institute. That’s still short of the 950 millimeters of rain recorded in the full January 2020 — the most ever recorded for the month.

The institute forecast that rainfall in the state would only let up after Thursday.

In addition to collapsing hillsides that have claimed lives and closed roads, state authorities said they were concerned about the risk dams could give way. They were monitoring 42 dams in the state, three of which were considered at high risk, according to a document published Tuesday by the National Mining Agency.

Authorities expressed concern that water was overflowing the retaining wall of the Carioca hydroelectric dam, below which riverside residents had evacuated their homes, including in the town Para de Minas.

In a post on social media, the town’s mayor said firefighters used a helicopter to rescue 130 people stranded by the swollen river.

Minas Gerais was the site of two recent tragedies resulting from dam ruptures. In 2019, more than 200 people died when a dam in Brumadinho gave way and in 2015, the collapse of another dam killed 19 people.

The flood death total did not include the people who died when a towering rock slab detached from a canyon wall in the state’s southern region, landing on boaters, killing 10.

Authorities have said that rainfall may have contributed to the rock’s collapse, but are still investigating the causes.



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