Rodrigo de Almeira had dug for 15 hours through mud and debris, and
he looked like it. Auburn mud covered his head, his ripped shirt, his
torn jeans and his rubber sandals.
When asked Wednesday if he had been able to save
anyone from the massive landslide in the slum where he lives, he
silently shook his head. Of the 138 people confirmed dead from Rio's
heaviest rains on record, at least 18 died in his shantytown, Pleasure
Hill.
"Right there at least 15 people I know died," Almeira
said, staring at a massive mound of mud and debris. Wood planks —
remnants of the shacks engulfed by the landslide — poked through the mud
as 30 rescue workers gingerly dug at it with picks and shovels, still
looking for survivors.
"We found a guy alive this morning, so we had hope,"
said Almeira, 28. "He didn't make it, we were told he died on his way to
the hospital."
Because of the continuing rains, steep hillsides and
loose earth, officials said there had been few successful rescues. One
man, Carlos Eduardo Silva dos Santos, 24, was pulled alive from under a
concrete wall in western Rio. Firefighters said they had no count on how
many people had been rescued.
The death toll could easily rise. An official with Rio's fire department
said at least 60 people were missing Wednesday afternoon. And although
the rain that poured down without interruption from Monday afternoon
through Wednesday morning had finally begun to let up, it was raining
again Wednesday night and more rain was expected through the weekend.
Nearly all the deaths occurred in landslides that
engulfed the slums, yet another reminder that life in one of the world's
most famous playgrounds is much different for the poor than it is for
the rich.
Residents of the slums often endure dangers such as
the frequent shootouts between police and heavily armed drug gangs, and
when heavy rain
falls on slopes crowded with poorly built shacks, nature itself can deal
out death.
Almeira and other slum residents say they have
nowhere else to go if they want jobs in Rio's richer areas.
"The government wants to forcefully remove the
residents living in danger, and that is understandable," said Leandro Ribeiro, another
slum resident. "But where are we supposed to go? Some people have been
living here for 30 years. This is their home."
Mayor Eduardo Paes said he was taking a tougher stand
on forced relocations. He announced that 1,500 families were going to
be removed from their homes on Pleasure Hill and in Rochina, one of
Latin America's largest slums.
"I don't want to spend next summer sleepless,
worrying if the rains are going to kill somebody," he told reporters,
without saying when the relocations would occur.
Rio was in chaos after the record rains fell this
week. Trees and power lines were knocked down, enormous craters were
seen in the streets, wastewater flowed down to the city's white sand
beaches and it was nearly impossible to get anywhere in the city of 6
million people.
In Rochina, officials said 16 inches (41 centimeters)
of rain had fallen so far this month — three times the amount normally
expected for all of April. Similar figures were seen across Rio's
metropolitan area.
The Rio state Civil Defense department said at least
11,000 people were forced from their homes by punishing rain that filled
streets with raging torrents and ground Brazil's second-biggest city to a halt the
previous day.
"When the man upstairs sends us this much rain, there
isn't a thing that anyone can do," Pedro Souza said as he tried to
unclog a sewer drain with a broom outside an apartment building in
Copacabana.
Rio de
Janeiro state Gov. Sergio Cabral declared a three-day mourning
period, and children were kept from schools for a second straight day.
The sun emerged in parts of Rio, but by late
afternoon intermittent rains began, raising fears that more water would
dislodge saturated ground and cause more slides, the mayor said.
Officials said potential mudslides threatened at least 10,000 houses in
the city.
Some criminals took advantage of traffic jams caused by the flooding to
rob stranded motorists, police reported.
Julia Freitas, a 25-year-old university student, told O Globo newspaper she was
approached in her car by a group of men offering help.
"When I rolled down my window, one put a shard of glass to my neck and
took my watch, cell phone and purse," Freitas said.
Officials downplayed the possibility of similar downpours derailing World Cup matches in
2014 or the Olympics in 2016, noting that those events are not scheduled
to be held during the nation's rainy season.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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