The persistent rains have wreaked havoc in the province, destroying homes, collapsing buildings and washing away major roads. Photo / AP
The persistent rains have wreaked havoc in the province, destroying homes, collapsing buildings and washing away major roads. Photo / AP
Heavy rains and flooding have killed at least 341 people in South Africa's eastern KwaZulu-Natal province, including the city of Durban, and more rainstorms are forecast in the coming days.
The death toll is expected to rise as scores of people, including whole families, are missing, officials said.
The persistentrains have wreaked havoc in the province, destroying homes, collapsing buildings and washing away major roads.
The damage to Durban and the surrounding eThekwini metropolitan area is estimated at many millions of dollars, eThekwini Mayor Mxolosi Kaunda said.
The death toll is expected to rise as scores of people, including whole families, are missing. Photo / AP
At least 120 schools have been flooded, causing officials to temporarily close all schools in the province.
At least 18 students and one teacher from various schools have died in the floods, Education Minister Angie Motshekga said.
"This is a catastrophe and the damage is unprecedented. What is even more worrying is that more rain is expected in the same areas that are already affected," Motshekga said.
Police used stun grenades to disperse residents in the Reservoir Hills areas of Durban who were protesting what they said was the lack of official assistance, according to South African media reports.
The South African National Defence Force has deployed troops to assist with rescue and mop-up operations.
Women fetch water from broken water pipes along the main road in Durban, South Africa. Photo / AP
The floods have knocked out water and electricity to large parts of Durban and the surrounding eThekwini metropolitan area and it will take at least a week to restore those services, according to officials.
President Cyril Ramaphosa visited and is convening an emergency Cabinet meeting to declare the floods a national disaster so that funds can be released to help repair the damage. He visited several areas hit by the floods and mudslides this week.
Fourteen crocodiles that were swept away from a farm in the Tongaat area north of Durban have been recaptured, according to wildlife officials.