floods evacuate 22,000 people

More than 22,000 people were evacuated on Sunday, December 19, in Malaysia due to the worst flooding in the country in seven years, according to government figures. The torrential rains that have fallen since Friday in this Southeast Asian country accustomed to monsoon storms at the end of the year, have caused river floods, inundating urban areas and preventing traffic on major roads.

A government website reports more than 22,000 flood victims in eight states of the country, including more than 10,000 in Pahang state, in central Malaysia.

Read also Floods in Malaysia: 21 dead and 8 missing

” By surprise “

Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob expressed his surprise to see the country’s richest state, Selangor, which surrounds the capital Kuala Lumpur, caught in the floods, forcing more than 5,000 people to leave their homes.

“In Selangor, this happened as if by surprise, because the monsoon season (…) rarely causes flooding in Selangor”, he said at a press conference late Saturday night.

According to a government website, water levels remained dangerous Sunday morning in six central and northeastern states. As the rain subsided in some areas, the meteorological service warned that rainfall was expected to continue in parts of Pahang.

Malaysia experienced its worst floods in 2014, forcing 118,000 people to leave their homes.

The World with AFP

source site-29