Landslides and floods set off by the heaviest rains in decades killed at least 95 people in Rio de Janeiro state as heavy rain continued in Brazil's second city today.
Most victims died in more than 180 mudslides, authorities said. Rio's fire service said at least 40 injured people were taken to hospitals as the search went on for people reported missing, and that the death toll was certain to rise.
Mayor Eduardo Paes warned residents to stay away from risky hillside areas and said public schools would stay closed for a second day today. Rains kept pummelling Rio de Janeiro today as officials scrambled to restore transit after 96 people were killed by landslides and floods.
The mayor said traffic had improved after flooded highways left commuters and residents stranded yesterday across the city, but called on people to postpone meetings and avoid travelling if possible.
"From the point of view of mobility, the situation is better than yesterday," Mr Paes told reporters at an early morning press conference. "The city is starting to return to normal, but the rains are still intense."
He called on those living in hillside slums at risk for mudslides - which were responsible for most of yesterday's deaths - to leave their homes as the rains continued. "Their lives are at risk," Mr Paes added.
A spokesman for Rio's fire department said rescue workers are still searching for 49 people declared missing in the wake of the rains, the heaviest to hit the city in at least three decades.
Brazil's most popular football team Flamengo postponed a match with a rival team from Chile because of the rains. Schools in Rio suspended classes for a second day.
Yesterday, the mayor said some 1,200 people had been made homeless and that 10,000 houses remained at risk, mostly in the slums where about a fifth of Rio's people live, often in precarious shacks that are highly vulnerable to heavy rains.
Television images on Tuesday showed central parts of Rio flooded and abandoned cars under water. Near Copacabana beach, residents waded through ankle-deep water on their way to work.
The latest flooding and transportation chaos has renewed attention on Rio's poor infrastructure as it prepares to host the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games in 2016.
In January, at least 76 people died in flooding and mudslides in Brazil's most populous states of Rio, Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais. Dozens of people were killed in a landslide at a beach resort between Rio and the port city of Santos.
Reuters