HANOI, Aug 11 (AFP): Vietnamese emergency services were Monday seeking to reach isolated and flood-hit northern communities after tropical storm Kammuri left at least 100 people dead and 50 missing over the weekend.
Flash-floods and landslides since Friday have cut major highway and rail links to the mountainous region bordering southern China. The heavy downpours have also knocked over trees and telephone and electricity lines.
Thousands of troops and disaster relief personnel were using trucks and boats to deliver water, food and medicines to residents in flooded villages, with some people stranded on roofs by the murky waters.
"We have reached some areas that had been isolated for two days," Thao A Tua, a disaster relief official from worst-hit Lao Cai province, told AFP.
"We are focusing on finding the people still missing. It's bad, we are afraid they are dead and we'll have to recover their bodies."
Hundreds of foreign tourists were stuck in the scenic northern region, which is dominated by ethnic minorities, but none were reported to be among those killed or the 38 people injured in the disaster, officials said.
The rains had stopped Monday but severed roads hampered relief efforts.
"The traffic jams are very serious... and many vehicles and passengers are stuck," central emergency relief authorities said in a report. "Local inhabitants face many difficulties because there is not enough food."
The Central Committee for Flood and Storm Control also ordered local authorities to check dykes along the swollen Red and Thai Binh Rivers.
150 dead, missing after storms hit Vietnam
FE Team | Published: August 12, 2008 00:00:00 | Updated: February 01, 2018 00:00:00
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