Saudi flood victim toll increases

Saudi flood victim toll increases

Saudi emergency services have said the toll from floods that tore through the port city of Jeddah this week has risen to 106.

Torrents of water inundated the Red Sea port on Wednesday after Saudi Arabia saw some of the heaviest rainfall in years. Some 1,400 residents had to be rescued.
Many of the victims were drowned or were killed by collapsing bridges and in car crashes.
Civil defense planes flew over the affected areas searching for missing people, the Jeddah authorities said in a statement to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).
No pilgrims attending the annual Muslim hajj pilgrimage 80 km away in Mecca were among the dead, though Jeddah is the main point of travel for pilgrims leaving the city.
But Al Jazeera correspondent Omar Chtriwala reported on Sunday that bodies are still being recovered and that the toll is likely to rise.
Waleed Abu al-Khair, a Riyadh-based human rights lawyer, says he plans to file complaints against the civic service departments.
A group launched on Facebook earlier in the week entitled “National Campaign to Save the City of Jeddah” in Arabic, criticizes the government response and has registered 11,000 members so far.
Numerous media reports have flagged up the issue of Jeddah’s poor drainage and infrastructure in recent years, and the city saw water shortages over summer.
Saudi authorities said they are working around the clock to clear Jeddah’s roads of hundreds of vehicles destroyed by the floods before pilgrims from abroad begin to leave the country via the city’s air and sea ports.
PHOTO CAPTION
Cars are stranded in flood waters in the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah on November 25.
Al-Jazeera

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