Brazil troops to quell looting after landslides
BRASILIA, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Brazil sent hundreds of state and federal police officers to quell looting by homeless and hungry landslide victims facing the threat of disease after heavy flooding that authorities say killed more than 100 people and displaced 54,000.
Rescue workers shoveled through massive mudslides that buried homes and cars and ferried stranded survivors to safety in rubber dinghies, as the disaster prompted President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to visit the region on Wednesday.
Lula will authorize 720 million reais ($306 million) in emergency relief funds, a spokeswoman for the presidential palace said, after residents complained that food aid had failed to arrive.
Six areas that declared a state of emergency, some of them wealthy districts, and as many as 100,000 people in southern Santa Catarina state are largely cut off from help after landslides and raging rivers washed out roads, cut power and downed telephone lines.
The official death toll rose to 86, according to the Civil Defense agency, but agency officials in Santa Catarina estimated it was more than 100. Thirty people were still missing.
In the cities of Blumenau and Itajai, among the worst hit by the floods, people ransacked supermarkets and grocery stores during the night in search of food, local officials said.
"Many haven't had food or water in four or more days, they're hungry," Maj. Sergio Murillo de Mello, commander of the Itajai fire department, told Reuters.
"We desperately need those food baskets that were promised," he said.
Television footage of the region showed houses and cars buried under mudslides, while trees and household items drifted through flooded streets.
A handful of people were arrested in Blumenau for looting.
More than 200 police officers and at least 50 agents of the National Security Force were arriving from the state capital Florianopolis to help prevent further looting in the flooded cities, a spokesman for the local police told Reuters.
"There are more officers coming from other regions," the spokesman said.
FEAR OF DISEASE
The Itajai river, which rose by more than eight yards (meters) and flooded nearly 90 percent of the city's houses, began to recede on Wednesday, local authorities said.
But around a quarter of the houses remained flooded by more than 1 yard (meter) of water, they said. Continued...

