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Searchers race to recover bodies in Libya as death toll from flooding hits 5,100

A general view of the city of Derna
The Libyan coastal town of Derna after Mediterranean Storm Daniel.
(Jamal Alkomaty / Associated Press)
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Search teams combed streets, wrecked buildings and even the sea Wednesday to look for bodies in a coastal Libyan city where the collapse of two dams unleashed a massive flash flood that killed at least 5,100 people.

The Mediterranean city of Derna has struggled to get help after Sunday night’s deluge washed away most access roads. Aid workers who managed to reach the city described devastation in its center, with thousands still missing and tens of thousands left homeless.

“Bodies are everywhere, inside houses, in the streets, at sea. Wherever you go, you find dead men, women, and children,” Emad al-Falah, an aid worker from Benghazi, said by phone from Derna. “Entire families were lost.”

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Mediterranean Storm Daniel caused deadly flooding Sunday in many towns of eastern Libya, but the worst-hit was Derna. Two dams in the mountains above the city collapsed, sending floodwaters roaring down the Wadi Derna river and through the city center, sweeping away entire city blocks.

As much as a quarter of the city has disappeared, emergency officials said.

In Morocco, an earthquake left thousands dead. In Libya, floods washed neighborhoods away. But lifesaving help is snarled in politics and rivalries.

Waves rose as high as 23 feet, Yann Fridez, head of the delegation of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Libya, told broadcaster France24.

Mohammed Derna, a teacher in the city, said he, his family and neighbors rushed to the roof of their apartment building, stunned at the volume of water rushing by. It reached the second story of many buildings, he said. They watched people below, including women and children being washed away.

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“They were screaming, ‘Help! Help!’” he said over the phone from a field hospital in Derna.

Derna lies on a narrow coastal plain, at the base of steep mountains. Only two roads from the south remain usable, and they involve a long, winding route through the mountains.

Collapsed bridges over the river split the city center, further hampering movement.

Search teams went through shattered apartment buildings and retrieved the dead floating in the Mediterranean Sea, Al-Falah said.

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Ossama Ali, a spokesman for an ambulance center in eastern Libya, said at least 5,100 deaths were recorded in Derna, along with about 100 elsewhere in eastern Libya. More than 7,000 people in the city were hurt.

The startling death and devastation wreaked by Mediterranean Storm Daniel pointed to the storm’s intensity.

A spokesman for the eastern Libyan Interior Ministry put the death tally in Derna at more than 5,300, according to the state-run news agency.

The number of deaths was likely to increase, Ali said. At least 9,000 people are missing, but that number could drop as communications are restored.

At least 30,000 people in Derna were displaced, the U.N.’s International Organization for Migration said.

The devastation pointed to the storm’s intensity, but also Libya’s vulnerability. The country is split by rival governments, one in the east, the other in the west, and the result has been neglect of infrastructure.

Ahmed Abdalla, a survivor who joined the search-and-rescue effort, said his team was putting bodies in the yard of a hospital before taking them for burial in mass graves at Derna’s sole intact cemetery.

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“The situation is indescribable. Entire families dead in this disaster. Some were washed away to the sea,” Abdalla said by phone.

Derna is 150 miles east of Benghazi, where international aid started to arrive Tuesday.

In terms of its effect on the battlefield, a drone that fell from the skies one recent morning in an area south of the Libyan capital, Tripoli, was a nonevent.

Neighboring Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia, as well as Turkey, Italy and the United Arab Emirates, sent rescue teams and aid. The German government sent aid, including blankets, sleeping bags, sleeping mats, tents, water filters and generators.

President Biden said the United States would send money to relief organizations and coordinate with Libyan authorities and the United Nations to provide additional support.

Authorities transferred hundreds of bodies to morgues in nearby towns. More than 300, including 84 Egyptians, were brought to the morgue in the city of Tobruk, 105 miles east of Derna, the local medical center reported.

The victims’ lists reflected how Libya, despite its turmoil, was always a magnet for workers from around the region because of its oil industry.

More than 70 of Derna’s dead were from a single southern Egyptian village, Sharif. On Wednesday morning, hundreds attended a mass funeral in the village for 64 people.

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Rabei Hanafy said his extended family lost 16 men in the flooding, 12 of whom were buried Wednesday. Another funeral for four others was held in a town in the northern Nile Delta.

Among those killed in Libya was the family of Saleh Sariyeh, a Palestinian originally from the Ein Hilweh refugee camp in Lebanon who had lived in Derna for decades. The 62-year-old, his wife and two daughters were all killed when their home in Derna was washed away, his nephew Mohammed Sariyeh said.

The four were buried in Derna. Because of ongoing gun battles in Ein Hilweh, the family there could not hold a gathering to receive condolences from friends and neighbors, Mohammed said.

Derna, about 560 miles east of the capital, Tripoli, is controlled by the forces of powerful military commander Khalifa Haftar, who is allied with the eastern Libyan government. The rival government in western Libya, based in Tripoli, is allied with other armed groups.

Derna was once a hub for extremist groups in the years of chaos that followed the NATO-backed uprising that toppled and killed longtime dictator Moammar Kadafi in 2011.

Magdy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.

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