Rio Still Fears More Casualties and Mudslides, After Over 70 Deaths

Angra dos ReisBrazilian Colonel José Paulo Miranda, an officer in the Rio de Janeiro state Fire Department, declared  that he still did not have a final count of the missing, the dead or the exact number of buildings that were lost in the mudslide at the Enseada Bananal on Ilha Grande on New Year’s eve. 

“We are checking to find out how many locals were in this area, and the number of tourists. The information we have so far leads us to believe that unfortunately there are more bodies buried here,” he said.

Meanwhile dramatic stories are coming to light. For example, businessman Marcelo Repetto Filho was in a rented house on Ilha Grande with his wife, Claudia Cristine, and two daughters, aged 9 and 12, along with an uncle and an aunt.

Marcelo and Claudia Cristine survived but everyone else died. Marcelo said he was devastated. “What am I going to do without my wonderful, pretty little girls?”

In the town of Angra dos Reis, the Morro do Carioca death toll has now reached 21.

Civil Defense authorities now say that the total of deaths in the Angra dos Reis area (which includes Ilha Grande) stands at 50. In the state of Rio de Janeiro the total is more than 70. And they warn that as more rain is in the forecast, more mudslides are possible. The hillsides are already saturated with water, they say.

The destruction and deaths caused by the heavy rains in Angra are driving tourists away from the Rio’s south beaches, according to president of the Brazilian Hotel Industry (ABIH) for the Rio region, Alfredo Lopes.  He informed that since the tragedy, 40%  of the reservations in Angra dos Reis hotels were canceled.

In Ilha Grande, cancellations reached 55% and even Paraty, which has access problems due to the Rio-Santos (BR-101) landslides .

“Hotels with 98% of their rooms booked in New Year’s saw occupancy drop to 30% the next day. It’s natural for people to leave earlier when tragedy strikes, but the commotion and intensive media coverage are giving the wrong impression that areas that were not affected by the rain are also at risk,” said Lopes.

After four days of isolation, without water and electricity, residents of Vila Velha in Angra dos Reis, are trying  to return to their daily routine. Until Monday evening the 300 families living in the community and luxury condominiums in the area needed boats to go places.

ABr/Bzz

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian President Tells at UN Brazil Is Ready to Help the US and Europe

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff, on addressing UN’s 66th Assembly General, in New York, said ...

Brazil-USA: Learning to Bridge Cultures

When Brazilian and American executives are briefed on what to expect from their counterparts ...

Brazil Urges Obama to Tighten the Vise on Honduras to Get Zelaya Back

The President of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and ousted Honduran President Manuel ...

LETTERS

How would you fancy to have a job in a country where everybody else ...

Brazil Warns Bolivia: Raise Gas Too Much and We Will Stop Buying It

The Brazilian minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, stated today, May 5, that Brazil ...

Brazil and G4 Try New Push for UN Security Council Expansion

Brazil, Germany, Japan and India have submitted a resolution to the U.N. General Assembly ...

Olhares Cruzados, an Africa-Brazil exchange program

Slavery Is Past. It’s Time Brazil and Africa Unite in Mutual Understanding

"Without Angola, there is no Brazil," said the polemical Friar Antonio Vieira at the ...

Petrobras Opens “New Frontier” With Light Oil Discovery in Brazil

Brazilian government-controlled oil giant Petrobras confirmed this week the existence of light crude and ...

Nike and Puma Had Coach Parreira as Hostage, Say Brazilian Fans

Brazil returned home from the World Cup on Monday, June 3, to little fanfare, ...

Brazilian neurosurgeon Luiz Pimenta

Brazilian Neurosurgeon Performs World’s First Posterior Disc Replacement

In a milestone in the treatment of spine disease, Drs. Luiz Pimenta and Paul ...