At least 49 people have died in flooding in South Africa with toll expected to rise, officials say
JOHANNESBURG — At least 49 people have died in flooding in South Africa's Eastern Cape province after an extreme cold front brought heavy rain and snow to parts of the country, officials said Wednesday.
Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane said police provided the death toll, which is expected to rise as authorities continue to search for missing people.
'As we speak here, other bodies are being discovered,' Mabuyane told reporters at a briefing.
Mabuyane's office reported seven deaths in the floods on Tuesday, including six high school students who were washed away when their school bus was caught in floodwaters near a river on Tuesday. Four other students were among the missing, Mabuyane said.
Authorities found the school bus earlier Wednesday, but it was empty. Three of the students were rescued on Tuesday when they were found clinging to trees, the provincial government said.
Disaster response teams have been activated in Eastern Cape province and the neighboring KwaZulu-Natal province after torrential rain hit parts of southern and eastern South Africa over the weekend.
Power outages have affected hundreds of thousands of homes, authorities said.
The Eastern Cape province was especially hard hit, with houses submerged or destroyed and cars carried away by floodwaters in and around the city of Mthatha, around 430 kilometers (267 miles) south of the east coast city of Durban.
Eastern Cape officials said at least 58 schools and 20 hospitals were damaged by the floods. Around 500 people were taken to temporary shelters after their homes were washed away or damaged, they added.
'I have never seen something like this,' Mabuyane said.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa offered his condolences to the affected families in a statement. His office said South Africa's National Disaster Management Centre was now working with local authorities in the Eastern Cape.
Weather forecasters had warned for days prior that an especially strong weather front was heading for the eastern and southern parts of South Africa, bringing damaging rains in some parts and snow in others.
Gumede and Imray write for the Associated Press. Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa.

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CAPE TOWN, South Africa -- The death toll in floods in South Africa's Eastern Cape province has risen to 86, the police minister said Saturday as rescuers continued to retrieve bodies from the floodwater. Senzo Mchunu, the country's top law enforcement official, spoke to police rescue teams that have been searching for missing people and recovering bodies in and around the town of Mthatha since the floods hit in the predawn hours of Tuesday. Mchunu said the floods were a tragedy but urged local residents to ignore what he called inaccurate reports spreading on social media that the disaster was caused by someone opening the sluice gates at a nearby dam, leading to water surging through communities. Mchunu said the Mthatha Dam in question did not have sluice gates. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Friday during a visit to Mthatha that authorities would investigate if there were any problems with the local dam that might have led to the tragedy. A wall of water 3-4 meters (10-13 feet) high in places flowed out of the river, the head of the provincial government said, washing away victims with parts of their houses and trapping others inside their homes. Ramaphosa partly attributed the rains and floods to climate change and said some of South Africa's coastal regions were now constantly vulnerable to weather-related disasters. More than 400 people died in flooding in and around South Africa's east coast city of Durban in 2022, which a study linked to climate change. The floods in the Mthatha area and a neighboring district caught many people unaware despite weather services issuing warnings last week that an extreme cold front was heading for the region, bringing heavy rains and gale-force winds. The largely rural region is one of the country's poorest and authorities said communities living in informal housing close to the river were especially vulnerable when it burst its banks. Authorities have been criticized for the rescue response but also for the state of the infrastructure in the area. Officials believe that people are still missing and the death toll could rise further as rescue teams have been searching through floodwater and damaged homes for nearly a week. One of the bodies retrieved on Saturday was that of a boy that rescuers believed was around 13 or 14 years old. Many children are among the dead, although authorities haven't given an exact count. Some of the victims were washed up to 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) away from their homes by the floods.


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