Sri Lanka Declares ‘Largest’ Disaster as Cyclone Kills 355

The president called the nationwide flooding the largest and most challenging natural disaster in the island’s history, as emergency rescue efforts continue.

Sri Lanka’s president said that the island nation was grappling with the “largest and most challenging natural disaster in our history,” as the death toll from Cyclone Ditwah rose to 355 on Monday.

With 366 other people still missing, and over a million people affected as entire towns remain under water, officials said they feared the death toll would climb considerably. While the cyclone has passed the country, and is battering India’s southern coast, heavy rainfall and flooding is still predicted in some parts of the island.

The flooding and landslides were widespread, with deaths reported in more than half of the country’s 25 districts and people needing to be evacuated in more than 20 districts, overwhelming emergency response efforts. On Monday, rescue teams, aided by personnel and aircraft from neighboring India, were still trying to reach areas that had become off limits because of the high floods. More than 15,000 homes have been destroyed, according to an initial assessment on Sunday, the United Nations said.

 A long line of people wading through brown knee-high water, with power lines on one side and inundated shops on the other.
People wading through a flooded street after heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo on Sunday.Credit…Ishara S. Kodikara/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A man holds suit jackets above his head with one arm, while carrying bags with another, as he walks through thigh-high water outside a home.
A resident wading with his belongings through floodwaters outside his house in Wellampitiya on Sunday.Credit…Ishara S. Kodikara/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The nationwide destruction is a major setback for the country of 23 million, which is reeling from a series of blows: three decades of civil war that ended in 2009, the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 and, more recently, terror attacks and an economic crash.

“As a country, we are facing the largest and most challenging natural disaster in our history,” President Anura Kumara Dissanayake said in a televised address late Sunday. Referring to rescue efforts, he added: “With the nation affected from end to end, this is a highly challenging exercise that needs to be conquered.”

A person standing on a slope with rushing water, next to a one-story home in a forested area.
A landslide survivor in Sarasavigama village in Kandy on Monday.Credit…Eranga Jayawardena/Associated Press
A woman in a pink dress and a man in a blue shirt looking at a partly submerged house.
A house partially submerged by flooding after Cyclone Ditwah in Peliyagoda, on Monday.Credit…Thilina Kaluthotage/Reuters

By Monday, the authorities had partially restored train services, electricity and telecommunications, all of which had been disrupted. But the initial assessment of the damage showed that at least 10 bridges were damaged and more than 200 major roads were still “impassable,” according to the country’s road development authority.

Access to clean drinking water remained a major problem in large parts of the country.

“The estimated scale of destruction is severe,” Mr. Dissanayake said.

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