'Amazon Venice' struggles to stay above water amid Brazil floods
by Associated PressMay 15, 20211:44 pm +03 +03:00
The rivers have been swelling for weeks in Brazil’s Amazon region, and residents in a town that bills itself as "The Venice of Amazonas" traded motorcycles for canoes and are clambering atop fresh-laid planks inside their homes to stay dry.
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Anama, home to 14,000 people on a tributary of the Solimoes River that flows toward capital Manaus, is just one municipality of dozens in Amazonas state that has seen life upended by unusual rainfall.
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Amazonas’ civil defense secretariat warned the flood could soon be the biggest recorded in the last century.
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The secretariat said 350,000 people have already been affected.
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As the river continues rising, the sound of power saws in Anama is constant as residents cut boards and beams to build rudimentary scaffolding within their homes.
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It’s a race to stay above the water’s surface. Motorcycles are stored atop the wood, too.
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“What we’re living isn’t good. The flood is here, in this home,” said Luzia Santiago da Costa, a 62-year-old homemaker.
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Her knee problems mean she keeps her eyes focused on her steps while balancing atop the wood and moving slowly through her home.
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Raimundo Sampaio Sobreira, 63, said his floor is now so high that he’s begun hitting his head on the ceiling.
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“We are accustomed here, but this is going beyond the limits,” Sobreira said.
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Twenty of Amazonas’ municipalities are in a situation of emergency, and 22 have rivers spilling over their banks, according to the secretariat's statement.
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The latter group includes capital Manaus, where people have built makeshift bridges.
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The Negro River, which flows past Manaus to meet the Solimoes River, could reach its highest-ever level within days, the state’s government said this week.
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Increased precipitation is associated with the La Nina phenomenon, by which cooler-than-normal sea-surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean impact global weather patterns.