Six die in Limpopo floods

06/09/2012 Mother nature wreacked havoc in Pretoria yesterday as the first spring showers turned the city skyline pitch black and forced many people to run for cover. Certain parts of the city also saw hail falling and traffic was moving a snail's pace. Picture: Oupa Mokoena

06/09/2012 Mother nature wreacked havoc in Pretoria yesterday as the first spring showers turned the city skyline pitch black and forced many people to run for cover. Certain parts of the city also saw hail falling and traffic was moving a snail's pace. Picture: Oupa Mokoena

Published Jan 21, 2013

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Six people have died after the Limpopo river burst its banks, the provincial co-operative governance department said on Monday.

“Rescue operations in the area have been completed. On the record we have six people who died,” spokeswoman Dieketseng Diale said.

“We have not consolidated the figures we received today and have not received the figures from the police either.”

A total of 44 people were rescued at the Mapungubwe Main Gate next to the Kruger National Park, she said.

“At the moment we do not have a precise figure of the number of people rescued.”

Diale could not provide more details and said more details would be available after a meeting with the police and rescue teams on Monday evening.

On Sunday evening, rescue operations had to stop after 45 of the 334 people were rescued and resumed on Monday morning.

Residents were stranded when they sought refuge on rooftops and mountains.

The extent of the damage was still being assessed.

“A lot of houses have been damaged, but there is no way to give a figure because certain areas are still inaccessible.”

Provincial health and social development MEC Norman Mabasa was expected to visit the Musina hospital and flood victims on Monday morning.

“Such disasters weigh heavily on the response of our health services, so we are visiting Musina to ensure that everything is running smoothly as it should and (the hospital) is able to accommodate the flood victims,” he said.

On Monday morning, the SA Weather Service said more rain was expected in Limpopo and Mpumalanga.

“There is a warning for heavy falls in Mpumalanga and Limpopo for today, but it will improve later in the afternoon,” forecaster William Msianga said.

No rain was expected in the rest of country until Thursday.

In Mpumalanga, gravel roads and some camps inside the Kruger National Park remained closed on Monday because of heavy rains.

Three children were killed when their homes collapsed during rain in Limpopo over the weekend, a spokesman said on Sunday.

Vhembe district municipality spokesman Matodzi Mulaudzi said the municipality's disaster management team received reports about the deaths of two boys and a girl on Sunday morning.

Earlier, Mpumalanga police spokesman Colonel Leonard Hlathi said three people were killed when lightning struck their houses in Piet Retief during thunderstorms on Saturday morning.

The SA National Defence Force assisted in conducting search and rescue missions in both provinces.

Brigadier General Xolani Mabanga said 60 people were airlifted in the Makhado and Hoedspruit areas. - Sapa

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