In Uganda, 15 people die after heavy rains trigger landslides

After a chronic drought, heavy rains have fallen on a lot of Uganda since late July, inflicting deaths, flooding and the destruction of crops.

Rescuers work along Sume river in search for bodies of those killed after a landslide rolled down the slopes of Mt. Elgon through the Nanyinza village in Bududa district
Rescuers work alongside the Sume River trying to find the our bodies of these killed after a landslide rolled down the slopes of Mount Elgon via the Nanyinza village in Bududa district, Uganda in October 2018 [File: Newton Nambwaya/Reuters]

No less than 15 individuals died in western Uganda after their properties have been buried in a landslide triggered by torrential rains, the Pink Cross has mentioned.

Most of these killed have been girls and youngsters, Uganda Pink Cross spokeswoman Irene Nakasiita mentioned in a press release on Monday.

On the time of the assertion, emergency staff have been shovelling via mud in quest of survivors.

Nakasiita mentioned at the least six individuals had been rescued and transferred to a close-by hospital, as she posted photos of rescuers digging for others.

Kasese district, the place the catastrophe occurred, is susceptible to landslides, particularly throughout the wet season, as a result of it sits within the foothills of the Rwenzori mountains that straddle the border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

After a chronic drought, heavy rains have fallen on a lot of Uganda since late July, inflicting deaths and flooding and the destruction of crops, properties and infrastructure.

In July, flooding attributable to heavy rains killed at the least 24 individuals in Mbale district in japanese Uganda.

In October 2018, at the least 41 individuals died when a landslide rolled down the slopes of Mount Elgon via the Nanyinza village in the identical area.

The nation’s climate company had warned it might be hit by unusually sturdy and harmful rains within the August-December season and suggested individuals residing in mountainous areas to be vigilant or evacuate to safer areas.

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