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Grieving Libyans in desperate search for missing, as Red Crescent puts death toll at 11,300

Libyan authorities demanded an investigation on Thursday into whether human failings were to blame for thousands of deaths in the worst natural disaster in the country's modern history, as survivors searched for loved ones washed away by floods.

Lack of capable weather agency to warn residents contributed to toll, WMO says

The rush to help 30,000 people displaced by Libyan flood

1 day ago

Duration 2:23

Rescue crews are racing to find and save any survivors in Derna after roughly a quarter of the Libyan city was washed away by floodwaters. The city's mayor says the death toll could eventually reach 20,000.

Libyan authorities demanded an investigation on Thursday into whether human failings were to blame for thousands of deaths in the worst natural disaster in the country's modern history, as survivors searched for loved ones washed away by recent floods.

A torrent unleashed by a powerful storm burst dams on Sunday night and hurtled down a seasonal riverbed that bisects the city, washing multi-storey buildings into the sea with sleeping families inside.

Confirmed death tolls given by officials so far have varied, but all are in the thousands, with thousands more on lists of the missing. The Libyan Red Crescent said Thursday that the death toll had increased to 11,300, while Derna Mayor Abdulmenam al-Ghaithi has said deaths in that city could reach 18,000 to 20,000, based on the extent of the damage.

He told Reuters he was afraid the city would now be infected with an epidemic "due to the large number of bodies under the rubble and in the water."

A view of a flood-damaged area in the Libyan city of Derna, as seen on Thursday.

The World Meteorological Organization said the huge loss of life could have been avoided if Libya — a failed state for more than a decade — had a functioning weather agency in place.

"If there would have been a normally operating meteorological service, they could have issued warnings," WMO secretary general Petteri Taalashe said in Geneva.

"The emergency management authorities would have been able to carry out evacuation of the people and we could have avoided most of the human casualties."

Other commentators drew attention to warnings given in advance, including an academic paper published last year by a hydrologist, outlining the city's vulnerability to floods and the urgent need to maintain the dams that protected it.

An overturned vehicle and debris are shown along a muddy, unpaved road in a village.

Mohamed al-Menfi, head of the three-member council that acts as the presidency in Libya's internationally recognized government, said that the council had asked the attorney general to investigate the disaster.

Those whose actions or failure to act were responsible for the failure of the dam should be held accountable, along with anyone who held up aid, he said in a post on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

Usama Al Husadi, a 52-year-old driver, had been searching for his wife and five children since the disaster.

"I went by foot searching for them … I went to all hospitals and schools but no luck," he told Reuters, weeping with his head in his hands.

Husadi, who had been working the night of the storm, dialled his wife's phone number once again. It was switched off.

"We lost at least 50 members from my father's family, between missing and dead," he said.

Wali Eddin Mohamed Adam, 24, a Sudanese brick factory worker living on Derna's outskirts, had awakened to the boom of the water on the night of the storm and rushed to the city centre to find it was gone. Nine of his fellow workers were lost and around 15 others had lost their families, he said.

"All were swept away by the valley into the sea," he said. "May God have mercy upon them and grant them heaven."

No warning system

Rescue teams arrived from Egypt, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey and Qatar. Among countries sending aid, Turkey sent a ship carrying equipment to set up two field hospitals. Italy sent three planes of supplies and personnel, as well as two navy ships that had difficulty offloading because Derna's debris-choked port was almost unusable.

LISTEN | Devastation in Libya:

The Current15:51Dam breaches wash away entire Libyan neighbourhoods

Thousands of people are dead and missing in Libya after two dam breaches triggered floods that washed away entire neighbourhoods. Galloway hears how the impact of those floods are part of a decades-long neglect on the part of the country's leaders.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said it would release $2 million US from its emergency fund to support the victims, calling the floods a "calamity of epic proportions."

It added it would send trauma, surgical and emergency supplies from its logistics hub in Dubai.

Rescue work is hindered by the political fractures in a country of seven million people, where rival military factions still clash at times, and with no government holding nationwide reach since a NATO-backed uprising toppled Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

An internationally recognized Government of National Unity (GNU) is based in the capital of Tripoli, in the west, while a parallel administration operates in the east, under control of the Libyan National Army of warlord Khalifa Haftar, who failed to capture Tripoli in a bloody 14-month siege that unravelled in 2020.

Door-to-door searches

Derna has been particularly chaotic, run by a succession of armed Islamist groups, including, at one point, the Islamic State, before being uneasily brought under Haftar's control.

A delegation of GNU ministers were expected in Benghazi in the east on Thursday to show solidarity and discuss relief efforts, a rare occurrence since the eastern-based parliament rejected their administration last year.

Viewed from high points above Derna, the once-densely populated city centre was now a wide, flat crescent of earth with stretches of mud. Nothing but rubble and a washed-out road were left on Thursday at the site of the dam that had once protected the city. The desert riverbed, or wadi, had already subsided back to a trickle.

Below, the beach was littered with clothes, toys, furniture, shoes and other possessions swept out of homes by the torrent. Streets were covered in deep mud and strewn with uprooted trees and hundreds of wrecked cars, many flipped on their sides or roofs. One car was wedged on a gutted building's second-floor balcony.

A man holding a small child extends his arm to display a phone that has pictures of people on the screen.

"I survived with my wife but I lost my sister," said Mohamed Mohsen Bujmila, a 41-year-old engineer. "My sister lives downtown where most of the destruction happened. We found the bodies of her husband and son and buried them."

He also found the bodies of two strangers in his apartment.

As he spoke an Egyptian search-and-rescue team nearby recovered the body of his neighbour.

"This is Aunt Khadija, may God grant her heaven," Bujmila said.

With files from The Associated Press

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