Flash flooding in southern Morocco has reportedly killed at least 30 people, with many others still missing.
Heavy
storms have swept across several regions including tourist hub
Marrakesh, where torrential rain destroyed many mud homes on Sunday.
Roads and highways were blocked off, making it hard for emergency crew to reach people.
The
“exceptional” storms also swept across the regions of Guelmim, Agadir
and Ouarzazate, and a search was under way for the missing, the
authorities said.
The Arabic-language dailies Al Massae and Al Ahdath gave death tolls of 16 and 22 respectively.
Some 130
all-terrain rescue vehicles and 335 Zodiac inflatables and other boats
were being used, the interior ministry said, in a statement carried by
the North African country’s MAP news agency.
The agency said at least 14 people remained missing in Guelmim, 200km south of Agadir.
The national weather service warned that an alert over more heavy rainfall would remain in place until midday on Monday.
It said
around 100 mud-brick homes were partly or totally destroyed in the
south, and 100 roads cut off, including six national highways.
Boulid told Al Jazeera that authorities were warned that the amount of rainfall would trigger floods but choose to ignore them.
“It was
forecast that more than 100 millimetres of rain would fall, but nothing
has been done. They just waited for the catastrophe to unfold,” Boulid
said.
Flash floods are common in Morocco, where four children drowned in the south in September when they were swept away.
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