

The Red Cross said at least
205 bodies had been taken to the central morgue in Freetown. Police and
military personnel were at the scene in the mountain town of Regent searching
for people trapped in the debris.
Over 300 people were killed
when a mudslide struck the outskirts of Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown on
Monday, sweeping away homes.
The death toll is expected
to rise as more bodies are recovered, Red Cross spokesman Abu Bakarr Tarawallie
said.
Vice President Victor Foh
told Reuters at the scene: “It is likely that hundreds are lying dead
underneath the rubble.” He said a number of illegal buildings had been erected
in the area.
“The disaster is so serious
that I myself feel broken,” he said. “We’re trying to cordon the area. Evacuate
the people.”
Standing in the rain,
people cried and gestured toward a muddy hillside where dozens of houses once
stood, a Reuters witness said.
“We were asleep when we
heard the noise of one of the walls falling down. By the time we got up water
was flowing in and the whole house was flooded,” said 36-year-old Salimatu
Bangura.
She escaped, but her
brother died, she said.
Mudslides and floods are
fairly common during the rainy season in West Africa, where deforestation and
poor town planning has put residents at risk.

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