Turkish agency helps flood-hit Colombia

Turkish agency helps flood-hit Colombia

ANKARA / BOGOTA
As the death toll from a devastating flood and mudslide in southern Colombia rises to 314, the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA) sent aid packages to the affected region on April 8, state-run Anadolu Agency has reported.

TİKA’s Bogota Coordinator Mehmet Özkan said 200 aid packages sent to the southern city of Mocoa included urgent needs such as cleaning materials, medical equipment, antibiotics and painkillers.

“We are also sending armchairs, walkers and solar flashlights to the area,” he said.

According to Colombia’s disaster and emergency management, UNGRD, the death toll after last week’s flooding disaster rose to 314.

Heavy rainfall since April 1 has wiped many neighborhoods off the map in Mocoa, home to 45,000 people.

Almost 102 of the victims were under the age of 18, UNGRD said in a statement.

In a latest toll report on April 6, the UNGRD said 332 people were injured and at least 4,506 had been left homeless.

The disasters unit said it had received information on 127 people still missing, among them three foreigners; a Spaniard, a German and an Ecuadoran.

Mocoa, the capital of the department of Putumayo, was home to 70,000 people, about 45,000 of whom were affected by the disaster, according to the Red Cross.

In an effort to speed up reconstruction, the government formally declared a 30-day state of economic, social and ecological emergency in Mocoa.

The measure will allow direct contracting of services without the need for formal, more time-consuming procedures.

The hardest-hit areas were impoverished neighborhoods populated by residents uprooted during Colombia’s five-decade civil war.

Authorities are investigating whether local and regional officials correctly enforced building codes and planned adequately for natural disasters.

The mayor, the governor and their predecessors are also being probed to see whether they bear any responsibility, according to Colombian media reports.

The mudslide turned Mocoa into a wasteland of earth, boulders and debris.

Many survivors have had to take the disaster response effort into their own hands, clawing through the mud for their loved ones, digging their graves themselves and defending what belongings they have left from looters.