Over
650,000 displaced due to Sri Lanka floods, landslides
More
than 650,000 people have been displaced after days of heavy rains
triggered massive floods and landslides in Sri Lanka
25
December , 2014
The
Disaster Management Center (DMC) stated on Thursday that the
Batticaloa district, located about 300 kilometers (186 miles) east of
the capital, Colombo, was the worst-affected area.
The
center added that the number of displaced people will likely rise.
“We
have warned people living close to the river and canal banks to be
watchful of the rising water levels…,” a DMC spokesman said.
Six
days of heavy rains have affected the Northern, North Central and
Eastern provinces of the Asian country.
Irrigation
tanks and hydropower reservoirs in the northern and central parts of
the country have become flooded as a result of the downpour.
Aid
workers have been dispatched to try to reach people affected by the
natural disaster, as several roads have been closed in flood-ridden
areas.
So
far, only 80,000 displaced people have been provided with
accommodation in makeshift camps set up by the government, the DMC
said.
Thousands
of others have been forced to take refuge in schools, temples and
community halls in the provinces.
Sri
Lanka has experienced massive landslides and monsoon rains in recent
years.
In
late October, heavy rainfall caused part of a hillside to sheer off
and crash into the Meeriyabedda tea plantation near the town of
Haldummulla, about 200 kilometers (124 miles) east of Colombo. Nearly
40 people were reported missing or dead in the incident.
In
2011, flooding killed over a dozen people and displaced more than one
million others in many parts of the country
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