
Cape Verde floods kill at least eight people
On Monday morning torrential rains lashed the northern island in the Atlantic archipelago located off West Africa, swamping roads and sweeping away vehicles and people.
Municipal councillor Jose Carlos da Luz told a state broadcaster seven people had died in floods and one person was electrocuted, adding that three others were still missing.
In a report on Monday, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies put the death toll at nine and said 1,500 people had been displaced on Sao Vicente.
Sao Vicente usually records 116 millimetres (mm) of rain in a year, according to Cape Verde's meteorology institute. But early on Monday 193 mm fell in just five hours, according to Ester Brito, an executive at the institute.
"It is a rare situation because what was recorded is above our 30-year climatological average," she told Reuters, adding that in just two hours more rain fell than the island typically receives annually.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center said on Monday that Tropical Storm Erin was located about 280 miles (455 km) west-northwest of Cape Verde and packing maximum sustained winds of 45 miles per hour (75 km/h).
Interior Minister Palo Rocha said on Monday that floodwaters disrupted transport across Sao Vicente and severed the main road to Cesaria Evora International Airport, though the facility remained operational. Rockfalls also blocked traffic.
"It was a difficult night marked by panic and despair," Rocha told public radio, adding that first responders were inundated with distress calls.
Rescue and cleanup operations were ongoing, but Rocha said authorities were mobilising resources that would allow the island to quickly return to normal life.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
6 hours ago
- BBC News
Jersey lifeboat crew rescue stricken paddleboarders
Four people were rescued off the south coast of Jersey after drifting out to sea on a paddleboard, Jersey Fire and Rescue has alarm was raised shortly before 15:00 BST on Sunday and the inshore rescue boat was crew found the group and brought all four people safely back to shore without services stressed the importance of water safety, urging the public to always carry a means of calling for help and wearing appropriate safety gear. Island authorities said people had blocked the Grouville slipway with their parked cars earlier, potentially delaying emergency response times for rescuers using were also reminded to only park on the left-hand side of slipways at Le Hurel, Seymour, and La Rocque when facing the sea.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Fears Alaskan capital could disappear underwater as melting GLACIER sends torrents of floodwater rushing towards homes
Emergency managers are urging residents of Alaska 's capital, Juneau, to evacuate as glacial flooding from the Mendenhall River threatens to sweep through the city. Officials have recommended that residents within the 17-foot lake level inundation zone leave the area until the water recedes and an 'All Clear' message is sent via the wireless emergency alert system. In a Facebook post, officials said a glacial outburst has occurred at Suicide Basin, which is dammed by the Mendenhall Glacier that has experienced accelerated melting and retreat, primarily due to climate change. 'The basin is releasing, and flooding is expected along Mendenhall Lake and River late Tuesday through Wednesday,' they added. The river is expected to crest around 4pm local time (8pm ET) on August 13. Authorities are now racing against the clock to protect Mendenhall Valley, where most of Juneau's 32,000 residents live. They are relying on two miles of emergency flood barriers installed just last month, though officials warn the swelling waters could overwhelm them. A large glacial outburst can release as much as 15 billion gallons of water, the equivalent of nearly 23,000 Olympic-size swimming pools, according to the University of Alaska Southeast and the Alaska Climate Adaptation Science Center. Nicole Ferrin, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service (NWS), said: 'This will be a new record, based on all of the information that we have.' At 3:30am Wednesday, Mendenhall Lake's stage was 15.3 feet and rising, already within major flood stage, which begins at nine feet. Forecasts predict a record crest between 16.25 and 16.75 feet is expected between 8am and 12pm, with increasing confidence that the river will peak near 16.75 feet around 8am. Water levels are expected to drop below the major flood stage by Wednesday night. The NWS said that as water levels rise, flooding will progressively impact homes, roads and riverbanks along View Drive, Meander Way, River Road, and surrounding areas. Low-lying yards and backyards will begin to flood at around 11 feet, with roads becoming impassable and bank erosion increasing as levels climb. By 15 to 16 feet, multiple homes, intersections, and parts of Riverside Drive will experience major flooding, and by 17 feet, entire neighborhoods, including homes on Meadow Lane, businesses near Vintage Park Boulevard, and all of View Drive, could be inundated, with streets submerged and riverbanks overtopped. A glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) is very different from typical flooding caused by heavy rain or storms. According to the US Geological Survey (USGS), glacial lakes form in small side valleys that have lost ice and become blocked by the main glacier or by natural rock and debris. Over time, these ice-free basins fill with water until the pressure becomes too great. The USGS explains that when the water forces a path beneath the glacier, it can suddenly release downstream, triggering a GLOF. 'These events are unpredictable and have caused significant loss of life and infrastructure worldwide,' the USGS said. 'Furthermore, it is unclear how these lake hazards may change as temperatures rise and glaciers continue to melt.' Many roads, including Mendenhall Loop Road, have been closed, along with facilities along the Mendenhall Valley Public Library, Diamond Park Field House, Diamond Park Aquatic Center and fields located along the river. 'The closure will remain in effect until water levels recede below 12 feet and bridge engineers complete a safety inspection,' officials said. A Red Cross shelter was set up for residents at Floyd Dryden Gymnasium. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has also issued a Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) over a portion of the Mendenhall River until 8pm on August 19. 'No flights, including drones, are allowed in the TFR zone from the surface up to and including 400 feet AGL unless authorized by the Incident Commander and FAA Air Traffic Control,' the alert reads. The Mendenhall Glacier is about 12 miles from Juneau and is a popular tourist attraction due to its proximity to Alaska's capital city and easy access on walking trails. The only trails currently open are the Trail of Time and East Glacier. All other lake level trails, including Nugget Falls, Photo Point, and Moraine Ecology, are closed until further notice. Homes on the city's outskirts are within miles of Mendenhall Lake, which sits below the glacier, and many front the Mendenhall River. Flooding from the basin has been an annual concern since 2011, and in recent years, it has swept away houses and inundated hundreds of homes. This year, government agencies installed temporary barriers in an effort to protect several hundred homes in the inundation zone from widespread damage. The flooding occurs because a smaller glacier near the Mendenhall Glacier has retreated, a consequence of warming temperatures, leaving a basin that fills with rainwater and snowmelt each spring and summer. When the water builds enough pressure, it forces its way under or around the ice dam formed by the Mendenhall Glacier, spilling into Mendenhall Lake and eventually the Mendenhall River, as it did Tuesday. Before the basin reached its capacity and began overtopping, water levels were rising rapidly, up to four feet per day on especially sunny or rainy days, according to the NWS. Juneau experienced consecutive years of record flooding in 2023 and 2024. Last August, the river crested at 15.99 feet, about one foot above the previous record, with flooding spreading farther into Mendenhall Valley. This year, officials predicted the river would crest between 16.3 and 16.8 feet.


Reuters
7 hours ago
- Reuters
Heavy rain disrupts traffic, floods roads in India's Mumbai
MUMBAI, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Incessant heavy rain lashed India's financial capital of Mumbai on Monday, disrupting flights, flooding roads and prompting shutdowns of schools. Some parts of Mumbai recorded more than 140 mm (5 inches) of rain from Monday morning, the weather department said, causing traffic snarls as cars stalled on inundated roads. Three people were injured when the staircase of a two-storeyed building collapsed in a southern district of the city late on Sunday night. The weather department warned of heavy rain on Monday and Tuesday, issuing a red alert for Mumbai and surrounding areas, and authorities asked residents to stay home. At least nine incoming flights into Mumbai aborted landing, news website NDTV said. It was not immediately clear whether the flights had been diverted elsewhere. Torrential rain has killed dozens of people and deluged villages in India's Himalaya mountains over the last two weeks.