BSS
  20 Feb 2022, 08:51

Toll mounts as Brazil storm rescuers retrieve more bodies

PETROPOLIS, Brazil, Feb 20, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Rescue workers pulled more
bodies Saturday from the muddy wreckage left by devastating floods and
landslides in the Brazilian city of Petropolis, where the death toll rose to
146, including 26 children.

   In a dense fog, workers dug with spades and shovels through the rubble and
muck as the search churned through its fifth day with little hope of finding
more survivors.

   An AFP photographer saw rescuers carrying out two recovered corpses in
body bags in the hard-hit neighborhood of Alto da Serra, as relatives sobbed
in the street.

   In the heart of the disaster zone, rescue workers occasionally blew loud
whistles to call for silence and listen for signs of life.

   But authorities say there is little hope at this point of finding
survivors from Tuesday's torrential rains.

   The downpour turned streets to gushing rivers in the picturesque city in
the southeastern mountains, and triggered landslides in poor hillside
neighborhoods that wiped out virtually everything in their path.

   Officials say 24 people have been rescued alive, but that came mostly in
the early hours after the tragedy.

   Rio de Janeiro state police said 218 people remained missing as of late
Friday.

   Meanwhile, 91 of the 146 bodies recovered so far have been identified,
according to the police.

   Many of the missing may be among the unidentified bodies. But the numbers
have been hazy, and it is difficult to know how high the death toll could go.

   President Jair Bolsonaro, who flew over the disaster zone Friday by
helicopter, said the city was suffering from "enormous destruction, like
scenes of war."

   Tuesday's was the latest in a series of deadly storms to hit Brazil, which
experts say are made worse by climate change.

   In the past three months, at least 198 people have died in severe rains,
mainly in the southeastern state of Sao Paulo and the northeastern state of
Bahia, as well as Petropolis.

   - 'Little by little' -

   Normal life has been slow to return to central Petropolis, a charming
tourist town that was the 19th-century summer capital of the Brazilian
empire.

   Staff were busy cleaning out shops in the city center, where little was
open besides essential businesses such as supermarkets and pharmacies.

   One bookstore owner had to dump her entire stock of water-logged books in
the street.

   "They were stocked in the basement. It filled with water all the way up to
the ceiling," said Sandra Correa Neto, 52, her thousands of books waiting for
the city's overloaded sanitation workers to collect them.

   "We're so sad to lose all these books. We can't even donate them, they're
too damaged. It pains me," she told AFP.

   Elsewhere in the city center, family members cried as rescue workers dug
through the ruins of a collapsed house, looking for the mother of a family of
four.

   The father and two children's bodies had already been recovered.

   In the Alto da Serra neighborhood, atop the worst landslide, rescue
workers in bright orange uniforms kept up a slow, dogged search alongside
exhausted residents looking for their missing loved ones.

   Authorities say the mountain of mud and rubble is unstable, so the search
is being carried out with hand tools and chainsaws at the hardest-to-reach
spots.

   It would be too dangerous to bring in the excavators being used in less
difficult zones near the bottom of the hillside, said Roberto Amaral,
coordinator of the local fire department's special rescue group.

   "It's impossible to bring in heavy machinery up here, so we basically have
to work like ants, going little by little," he told AFP.

   A sobering series of funerals, meanwhile, continued at the city's main
cemetery, where 90 victims have been buried so far -- 44 on Saturday alone.