1,000 feared dead in southern Ethiopia floods

Police are preparing for death toll in southern Ethiopia floods to rise up to 1,000, a senior police officer said today.

Police are preparing for death toll in southern Ethiopia floods to rise up to 1,000, a senior police officer said today.

Rivers in southern, northern and eastern Ethiopia burst their banks after 11 days of heavy rains, and more rain was expected. The scale of the disaster is overwhelming impoverished Ethiopia's rescue efforts, which have been bolstered by UN and other international agencies.

"Things are getting out of control. We are preparing ourselves for up to a 1,000 dead bodies from this flood alone. We need additional helicopters and boats for rescuing," said a spokesman for the southern regional police.

He said they were burying most bodies immediately to prevent a disease outbreak.

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The nearest morgue was more than 124 miles away from the flood area. "We are appealing to aid agencies and the international community for medical supplies, food, clean water, blankets and anything that can help," he said.

"There are dead bodies and animals in the water making the likelihood for a disease outbreak very high."

He said that the water level is rising along River Kibish, which is near the Omo Valley, where as many as 10,000 people have been stranded in the country's south. The death toll in southern Ethiopia was 364.

Another 256 were killed in the east and six in the north. According to the United Nations 300 people are still missing in the east. Police said they were calling off the search for bodies in eastern Ethiopia, but are continuing their search and rescue in the south.

Rescuers fear a cholera outbreak among survivors. Cholera is transmitted through contaminated water and is linked to poor hygiene, overcrowding and bad sanitation. Symptoms include diarrhoea and vomiting, which can kill unless treated quickly.

The rains, which usually fall between June and September, are some of the heaviest seen in a country that frequently suffers severe drought and where millions depend on food aid. Ethiopia's weather agency predicted more heavy rains in the coming days, prompting the government to issue flood warnings along the country's longest river, the Awash, which stretches 746 miles.

AP