Mozambique counts 13 dead in floods so far but toll expected to rise
A house stands partially submerged in floodwater after weeks of heavy rainfall in Maputo, Mozambique, January 21, 2026. REUTERS/Amilton Neves
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Maputo, Mozambique, authorities on Thursday reported 13
deaths from severe floods over the past two weeks, though the figure is
expected to rise sharply, with aid workers saying they expect more bodies to be
found as waters recede.
The country has been hit with heavy rains that caused rivers
and dams to overflow, submerging towns and affecting more than half a
million people. Parts of neighbouring South Africa were also flooded.
Rain had subsided in some areas by Thursday. Some buildings
in the capital Maputo were submerged to their rooftops, and the city was cut
off from the rest of the country due to flooding on a major national highway,
making areas inaccessible.
"I won't give up," shopkeeper Justino Zita said,
wading through the brown water that had flooded his shop and destroyed his
livelihood in Maputo. "We won't give up but we will have difficulty."
Mary Louise Eagleton, representative of the United Nations
children's agency (UNICEF) in Mozambique, said she expected the toll of dead
and wounded to rise.
"We expect that a large proportion of those who have
been swept away or killed by the floods are children," she told Reuters.
Officials describe the flooding as the worst since at least
2000, when around 700 people were killed in Mozambique.
Early-warning systems and mandatory evacuations could mean
fewer people may have been killed this time, said Paulo Tomas, spokesperson for
the National Institute for Disaster Risk Management.
"Many people complied by voluntarily leaving the most
affected areas," he said. But he said the lower death toll counted so far
may also be partly a result of "limited access to some areas and the fact
that several zones remain submerged".


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