Flooding in Bolivia kills 38 people

Central and northern regions of country hardest hit as volume of rain rises five fold

A woman speaks along a flooded street on the outskirts of Trinidad, some 400 km northeast of the Bolivian capital La Paz. Photograph: David Mercado/Reuters.
A woman speaks along a flooded street on the outskirts of Trinidad, some 400 km northeast of the Bolivian capital La Paz. Photograph: David Mercado/Reuters.

Torrential rain and floods in Bolivia have killed 38 people and left many homeless, the government said today.

Forecasters are predicting more heavy rainfall with the north of the Andean country again likely to be the worst affected.

The ministry of defence said it had flown in food aid and the army was evacuating families from the worst affected regions, such as the Amazonian and cattle-rearing department of Beni, northeast of the capital La Paz.

About 100,000 head of cattle are threatened and some 6,000 hectares of crops have been destroyed, around 0.2 per cent of Bolivia’s total, the government said.

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More than 40,000 households have been affected by the heavy seasonal rains since October, around five times more than last year, with the central and northern regions of the country hardest hit.

Reuters