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Bolivia declares an emergency following floods that kill more than 50

Bolivia declares an emergency following floods that kill more than 50

The Bolivian president Luis Arce declared an emergency national on Wednesday, after torrential rainfall and severe flooding left more than fifty dead and more than 100,000 displaced across the country.

The heavy rains have affected all nine departmental regions in Bolivia. One has been declared in a disaster state and three others are in an emergency state.

Arce, during a recent press conference, said that "these natural disasters force us to declare a state of emergency". He added that rains have affected over 370,000 households. Bolivia's rainy season, which typically lasts from November to February, is a common occurrence in the country with over 12 million people.

Lucia Walper from Bolivia's Senamhi Meteorological Service said that several orange and Red Alerts for River Overflows, which are usually issued in February, were issued this year in March and extended to April.

The declaration of an emergency allows the government to buy supplies and deploy resources. To help with the distribution of aid in heavily affected areas, thousands of soldiers were deployed across the country.

Congress will also approve a loan of $75 million from the CAF Development Bank of Latin America & the Caribbean, to deal with the fallout of natural disasters such as floods. (Reporting from La Paz by Monica Machiaco; Writing by Alexander Villegas, Editing by Sandra Maler).

(source: Reuters)