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Sudan declares three-month state of emergency over floods

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KHARTOUM, SUDAN – AUGUST 29: Sudanese children wade through a flooded street at al-Qalqili district in Khartoum, Sudan on August 29, 2020. Sudanese people continue their life under harsh conditions and try find a remedy for their damages after the heavy rain and flood in the southern region of capital city Khartoum. (Photo by Mahmoud Hjaj/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Sudan’s Security and Defense Council declared a national state of emergency for three months because of floods that have killed 99 people this year and designated Sudan a natural disaster zone, this is according to state news agency SUNA report early on Saturday.

The Sudanese minister of labor and social development said that in addition to the deaths, floods this year have injured 46 people, inflicted damage on more than half a million people, and caused the total and partial collapse of more than 100,000 homes, according to SUNA.

The rates of floods and rain for this year exceeded the records set during the years 1946 and 1988, with expectations of continued rising indicators, Minister Lena el-Sheikh added.

The council also announced the formation of a supreme committee headed by the ministry of labor and social development to deal with the ramifications of the floods for the fall of 2020, SUNA said.

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