A severe winter storm has claimed at least seven lives in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, with flooding and heavy snow causing widespread destruction since the weekend.
Authorities warn the death toll may rise as the region grapples with the aftermath of the catastrophic weather.
Floods Trigger Chaos
The South African Weather Service flagged a high flood risk, leading to road closures and hazardous conditions in the Eastern Cape, the worst-affected area.
The storm, driven by a powerful cold front forecast last week, has brought freezing temperatures, snow, and torrential rains, crippling infrastructure.
Search for Missing Schoolchildren
Rescue teams are urgently searching for a minibus taxi swept away by floodwaters on Tuesday, carrying an unknown number of schoolchildren.
Three children were found alive before operations paused at nightfall.
Efforts resumed today, Wednesday, with teams racing to locate the missing.
Emergency Response Ramps Up
Disaster management teams are deployed across heavily impacted areas like Mthatha and Butterworth, where over 500 residents have been displaced.
Temporary shelters have been set up, and humanitarian groups, including Gift of the Givers, are aiding rescue and relief efforts, as confirmed by Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane.
Power Outages Hit Half a Million
Nearly 500,000 households remain without electricity, worsening conditions for residents and complicating rescue operations.
The outages, coupled with damaged infrastructure, have intensified the challenges faced by communities in the freezing weather.
Rare Winter Severity
While South Africa’s winter often brings snow, the intensity of this cold front has overwhelmed preparedness efforts.
Forecasters had warned of the incoming system, but its scale has stretched local resources, prompting a coordinated national response.
Resilience Amid Crisis
With the death toll possibly reaching nine, per recent updates, the Eastern Cape faces ongoing challenges.
Rescue operations, power restoration, and support for displaced residents remain priorities as authorities and communities work to recover from this devastating storm.