logo
South Africa declares national disaster as flooding death toll rises to 92

South Africa declares national disaster as flooding death toll rises to 92

Leader Live20-06-2025
The Eastern Cape government honoured the victims of last week's floods with a provincial Day of Mourning and a memorial service at King Sabatha Dalindyebo Technical and Vocational Education and Training College in Mthatha, one of the few schools whose infrastructure remained intact.
Speaking at the public memorial service, Zolile Williams, a member of the executive council, said the people of the coastal province had not been the same since the disaster hit, and many now faced the challenging task of rebuilding.
'Since June 9, this province has been hit hard by unprecedented, catastrophic and unimaginable disasters, where in the whole of the province, about 92 people have perished,' Mr Williams said.
'Since that day, the Eastern Cape has not been the same. It is the first time we have experienced so many dead bodies, some of whom have not yet been found.'
An extreme weather front brought heavy rain, strong winds and snow to parts of the province caused flooding in one of South Africa's poorest provinces last week, leaving dozens dead and roads, houses, schools and other infrastructure damaged.
At least two schoolchildren who were washed away in a bus are among the unverified number of missing persons according to local media reports, while thousands have since been displaced.
Authorities have appealed for residents to report missing people so rescuers could better understand how many people they were still looking for.
Religious leaders from different Christian religions were among the hundreds of mourners who attended the memorial ceremony, lighting candles as a symbolic expression of remembering the 92 people who died in the floods.
In a government notice on Wednesday, Elias Sithole, director of the National Disaster Management Centre, said severe weather had caused property damage and the disruption of vital services in the provinces of KwaZulu-Natal, the Eastern Cape, the Western Cape, and the Free State, which prompted South Africa to declare a national state of disaster.
The declaration allows the government to release funding for relief and rehabilitation and will remain in place until it lapses or until the conditions can no longer be categorised as such and is revoked by the head of the centre.
President Cyril Ramaphosa recently visited the town of Mthatha, in Eastern Cape province, where the floods hit hardest.
Many of the Eastern Cape flood victims lived on floodplains close to rivers. Government officials said poor neighbourhoods with informal dwellings were most severely impacted. Authorities have been criticised for the rescue response but also for the state of theinfrastructure in the area.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pope calls for end to 'barbarity' after deadly Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic church
Pope calls for end to 'barbarity' after deadly Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic church

NBC News

timea day ago

  • NBC News

Pope calls for end to 'barbarity' after deadly Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic church

The church was watched over closely by the late Pope Francis, who spoke daily with its parish priest and once gifted his popemobile to the children there. In a rare and risky visit to Gaza — largely sealed off from foreign officials — Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, and Theophilos III, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, led a delegation into the territory on Friday to show their support. Video footage captured their arrival at the church, greeted by cheers and ringing bells. 'On behalf of all the Christians of our land, all the churches all over the world are united with us in this moment,' said Pizzaballa, who also led Sunday morning mass at the church. President Donald Trump called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu following the strike. White House spokesperson Tammy Bruce said it was an understatement to say Trump was not happy with Netanyahu during the call, adding that the U.S. had asked Israel to investigate the strike and 'ensure that all civilians, including Christian civilians, remain safe.' "Everyone is appalled," she said. On Friday, staunch Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) introduced a bill to strip $500 million in U.S. military funding to Israel, a measure that was overwhelmingly rejected but marked a rare rebuke. Netanyahu said that Israel 'deeply regrets that a stray ammunition hit Gaza's Holy Family Church" and called Pope Leo on Friday night. The Israel Defense Forces said it was reviewing the incident. Israel's Foreign Ministry said the results of the investigation would be published. Bruce called the prime minister's response 'an appropriate start' and reiterated Israel's framing of the strike as an accident. But admissions of regret have not satisfied the grieving Catholic community, which has amplified its calls for a ceasefire. The Jerusalem branch of the Vatican's Caritas federation named two of the dead as Saad Salameh, 60, the church's janitor, and Fumayya Ayyad, 84, who had been sitting inside a Caritas psychosocial support tent when the blast sent shrapnel and debris flying. The pope named the other as Najwa Ibrahim Latif Abu Daoud. Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, called for peace and an 'immediate ceasefire' following the strike, echoing Pope Leo and renewing calls made so often under Francis. 'With the Holy Father, the Catholic bishops of the United States are deeply saddened to learn about the deaths and injuries at Holy Family Church in Gaza caused by a military strike,' Broglio said in a statement. "May there be peace in Gaza." Pax Christi International, a Christian peace organization, condemned the strike, and called for "an immediate and permanent ceasefire." Yet while those calls may have intensified in the wake of the attack, there was little sign of one this weekend. Since Pizzaballa visited the Holy Family Church on Friday, Israeli air strikes had killed more than 100 people in Gaza, according to local health authorities. On Sunday, the Israeli military issued evacuation orders that suggested its ground offensive may be about to extend into new areas at the heart of the enclave, while the United Nations said that civilians were starving and in urgent need of aid. Pizzaballa, closer to the carnage than most foreigners have managed since the current conflict began, once again called for peace. "Churches all over the world, especially the church in the Holy Land, the Greek Orthodox, and all the churches, will never abandon and neglect you," he said, addressing the church. 'We are working in the diplomatic world in order for a ceasefire, to stop this war, this tragedy,' he said.

The painful truth about Christian anti-Semitism
The painful truth about Christian anti-Semitism

Spectator

time2 days ago

  • Spectator

The painful truth about Christian anti-Semitism

When I walked past a group of shouting protestors holding placards announcing, 'Christians for Palestine,' I couldn't resist: 'If Christians hadn't treated Jews so appallingly for so many centuries there wouldn't have been a need for Israel,' I said politely. 'Do you genuinely think that one-sided polemics are appropriate,' I asked There was a pause for self-righteous reflection, before one of the group responded: 'Typical! A Zionist playing the antisemitic card.' The truth is that this Anglican priest with three Jewish grandparents wasn't playing any card at all. I was trying to point out some of the inconsistencies and denial inherent in Christian opposition to Israel, which increasingly goes far beyond criticism of the situation in Gaza. Israel may now be close to 50 per cent Mizrahi (Jews from the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia) but its foundation was overwhelmingly Ashkenazi and European. In other words, Jews who had lived in Christendom. Some were ideological Zionists but most were fleeing horrendous persecution. Even with the former, it's impossible to fully separate a philosophical Zionism from the context of pogrom, expulsion, blood libel, and slaughter. A slaughter that was often at its most manic during Easter. Early in its history, the church had removed the Jewish Jesus from the Christian narrative – the Jew as Christ became the Jew as Christ-killer. St. John Chrysostom in the 4th-century is arguably the most infamous of the church fathers in this regard but he's far from unique. He championed the concept of Jewish deicide, described synagogues as pagan temples and worse than brothels, and compared Jews to demons. His supporters argue that this was part of a conflict between two rival groups and not antisemitism as we know it, but reality cries out to be heard. Even if that argument were true, and it's an impossible stretch, the man's writings such as Adversus Judaeos – Against the Jews – did much to shape subsequent attitudes and prejudice. There were hopes that the Reformation would improve the situation, and to an extent it did. But as early as 1537, Martin Luther worked to have the Jews expelled from Saxony and six years later, he published The Jews and Their Lies, in which he called for Jewish schools, homes, and synagogues to be destroyed. The Jews, he said, were, 'base, whoring people, that is, no people of God, and their boast of lineage, circumcision, and law must be accounted as filth.' For those who dismiss this as mere history, Martin Sasse, the Bishop of the Evangelical Church of Thuringia, supported Kristallnacht in 1938 and distributed a pamphlet entitled Martin Luther on the Jews: Away with Them! By the 19th-century there was a belief among some in the Jewish world that Christian antisemitism was on the decline. The more assimilated the Jews were, they assumed, the more they would be accepted. Theodor Herzl, raised in a secular, German-speaking family in Austria-Hungary, shared this optimism as a young man. It didn't last. He witnessed the horrendous treatment of French army officer Alfred Dreyfus, with the French Catholic church playing a leading role. It was clear to Herzl that patriotism, loyalty, and integration were insufficient, and only a Jewish state could guarantee dignity and protection. His portrait now hangs in the Speaker's chamber of the Israel parliament, where he's honoured as the founder of modern Zionism. Less than forty years after Herzl's death came the Holocaust. Nazism was philosophically pagan and anti-Christian but its anti-Jewish racism was accepted, or ignored, in much of occupied Christian Europe. Righteous Gentiles are remembered not because they were so numerous but so few. There were of course courageous Christians who defended their Jewish fellow citizens but one of the open wounds of modern Christian history is how little was done. A climate of the outsider, the lesser, the God murderer had been created over a thousand years, one that varied in intensity but was seldom completely absent. Much has changed since then, with the development of Christian Zionism (not always helpful) and a post-Holocaust theology that emphasises the Jewish nature of Jesus, his family and followers (always helpful). But along with this is replacement theology, a belief that the church has superseded the Jews as God's chosen. It has worrying implications and has gained popularity among anti-Zionists. As for Jesus being a Palestinian, this is just fashionable propaganda. The word Palestine had been used by the Greeks but Jesus was a Judean, a Jew, and the crucifixion and resurrection took place in Judea. It was the Romans in the 2nd century who changed the region's name to Syria Palaestina following a Jewish revolt and the expulsion of the Jews from their homeland. The medieval world continued the attempt to expunge Jesus' Jewishness and some modern leftists have followed suit in the name of what they regard as justice and anti-colonialism. Christians need to come to terms with their own history and filter criticism of the Jewish state through a sense of informed ownership and responsibility – and never accuse someone of 'playing the antisemitism card.' It's just not the Christian thing to do.

Florida attorney general reports wrongful charges under halted immigration law
Florida attorney general reports wrongful charges under halted immigration law

NBC News

time5 days ago

  • NBC News

Florida attorney general reports wrongful charges under halted immigration law

ORLANDO, Fla. — At least two people have been wrongly charged under a Florida law that outlaws people living in the U.S. illegally from entering the state since a federal judge halted its enforcement, according to a report Florida's attorney general is required to file as punishment for defying the judge's ruling. Both men were arrested in late May by deputies in northeast Florida's St. Johns County, more than a month after U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams in Miami issued an order freezing the enforcement of the state statute. The law makes it a misdemeanor for people who are in the U.S. without legal permission to enter Florida by eluding immigration officials. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said in his report filed at the beginning of July that he only became aware of the two cases at the end of June after requesting information from state and local law enforcement. As punishment for flouting her order and being found in contempt, the judge requires Uthmeier to file bimonthly reports about whether any arrests, detentions or law enforcement actions have been made under the law. On May 29, St. Johns County Sheriff's Office deputies arrested a man with an active immigration detainer from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and another man on counts of illegal entry and driving without a valid driver's license, according to the status report. As corrective action, the charge involving the man with the ICE detainer was dismissed in state court, and prosecutors filed a motion that was granted to vacate the charge for illegal entry in the second case, R.J. Larizza, state attorney for the jurisdiction that covers St. Johns County, said in a separate filing. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the legislation into law in February as part of President Donald Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. Immigrants rights groups filed a lawsuit on behalf of two unnamed, Florida-based immigrants living in the U.S. illegally shortly after the bill was signed into law. The lawsuit said the new legislation violates the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution by encroaching on federal duties. Williams issued a temporary restraining order and injunction that barred the enforcement of the new law statewide in April. The attorney general's office then unsuccessfully petitioned the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to override that decision. Uthmeier has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case. After Williams issued her original order, Uthmeier sent a memo to state and local law enforcement officers telling them to refrain from enforcing the law, even though he disagreed with the injunction. But five days later, he sent a memo saying the judge was legally wrong and that he couldn't prevent police officers and deputies from enforcing the law. The judge last month found Uthmeier to be in civil contempt of her ruling. Besides championing the new law, Florida officials have helped Trump's immigration crackdown with the construction of a new immigration detention center named "Alligator Alcatraz" at an isolated airstrip in the Florida Everglades. DeSantis said at a news conference Wednesday that a request has been developed for proposals for a second migrant detention facility at Camp Blanding in northeast Florida but no work has begun. Alligator Alcatraz has "grown quickly" but is not yet at the 3,000 to 4,000 detainees originally envisioned, DeSantis said in Tampa. "I'm willing to do Blanding once Alligator Alcatraz is filled," the governor said. "Once there's a demand, then we would be able to go for Camp Blanding."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store