COLOMBO: Desperation in Sri Lanka’s capital. People scrambling for rubber dinghies and makeshift rafts on Friday (May 20) to escape monster floods in the capital Colombo. Half a million people have fled their homes across the island.
The heaviest rains in 25 years have pounded the island since a week now, sparking huge landslides that have buried victims in up to 15 metres of mud. Officials have urged those living in affected areas to leave immediately. More than 60 people have died so far. Numbers could yet spike with many more reported missing.
President Maithripala Sirisena urged people to provide shelter and donate cash or food, as offers of assistance came in from overseas. “We have already got some assistance from our friends in the international community,” he said in a televised address. “Now I want to ask private individuals, companies and non-governmental organisations to help in anyway you can to help the victims.”
The national Disaster Management Centre (DMC) said 21 of Sri Lanka’s 25 districts had been affected. Around 300,000 people had been moved to safe shelters while a further 200,000 were staying with friends or family.
“Our information is that about half a million people have been driven out of their homes,” Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake told reporters.
“The (state-owned) Insurance Corporation alone received claims against flooded cars and home appliances amounting to 1.1 billion rupees. The actual loss is much, much more.”
Ms Diluka Ishani, who was being looked after at a school in Colombo’s Kolonnawa suburb, where the military provided meals and bedding, described how her family managed to escape the floods but had lost virtually everything. “We started moving to higher ground as the water level went up and then we found we had no other place to go to,” she told media.
Her family had first fled to higher ground near their home but became marooned and had to be plucked to safety on a small navy boat. “The navy saved our lives, but we lost all our belongings. The house is ruined as the water went above our roof.”
Private taxi hailing company PickMe added an “air lift” button to their app so that marooned users can give their coordinates to the airforce. It was not clear how many had used the free airforce lift.
India said it was sending two naval ships and an aircraft loaded with emergency supplies, including medicine, tents and mobile toilets.
Sri Lanka’s cricket team, who are on tour in England, announced a donation of 1 million rupees for victims and wore black armbands during the first Test at Headingley.
The meteorological department says the rains have been caused by a depression in the Bay of Bengal, ahead of the arrival of the south-west monsoon.
Large parts of Colombo were evacuated overnight in an operation led by the military, involving boats and helicopters.
The worst-hit areas were in Colombo’s north-eastern suburbs along the Kelani river, which began bursting its banks on Thursday evening.
Residents in the Kolonnawa district of the capital built jury-rigged rafts using plastic barrels to ferry marooned residents to high ground while the navy used rubber dinghies to help others to safety.
Some people appeared reluctant to move despite promises from the office of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe that the army would prevent looting.
The Lion Brewery, which has the local licence to produce Carlsburg, said its factory in an industrial area on the edge of Colombo was under water. Thousands of empty gas cylinders were also washed away by the floods, images in Sri Lankan media showed.
It was raining in Colombo on Friday morning, with heavier downpours to the north of the capital that officials said would further swell the Kelani.
Three people have been killed in flood-related incidents in Colombo but the national toll since the weekend now stands at 63.
The district of Kegalle, about 100km north-east of Colombo, has been worst-hit, with the toll from two separate landslides rising to 34 after troops pulled another body from the mud overnight.
A police officer in the area said that 144 people, including 37 children, had been reported missing since the landslides on Tuesday evening.
“We can’t definitely say if all these missing people were actually in their homes at the time of the disaster,” said the officer, who asked not to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media.
The officer said that there was no realistic hope of finding any survivors in landslides that buried two villages in up to 50 feet of mud. “This is turning into a recovery operation,” the officer said.
There was more heavy rain in Kegalle overnight and reports of fresh mudslides, although it was not known if anyone was killed.