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Added on the 18/04/2016 22:45:10 - Copyright : Reuters EN
People evacuate through flooded streets after heavy rains inundated the Chilean city of Talca, 200 km south of Santiago. IMAGES
Residents of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, walk in a flooded neighborhood after heavy rainfall causes severe flooding on the streets and in homes. IMAGES
The Belgian city of Spa experiences heavy rains, leading to flash flooding after a number of rivers in Wallonia burst their banks. IMAGES
Tenejapa, Nov 11 (EFE).- With some of their belongings on their backs, thousands of families in Mexico's southeastern states of Chiapas and Tabasco have abandoned their homes after the torrential rains that have inundated the region, causing severe flooding and at least 27 deaths.Tropical Storm Eta and Cold Front No. 11 dumped enormous quantities of rain in the region and in Central America, forcing many people to flee their homes for their own safety. (Camera: MITZI FUENTES GOMEZ).SHOT LIST: THE AREAS AFFECTED BY HEAVY RAINS IN TENEJAPA, MEXICO.SOUND BITE: ELÍAS LÓPEZ LUNA, RESIDENT OF THE TOWN OF MATZAM, TENEJAPA MUNICIPALITY, CHIAPAS STATE, MEXICO. TRANSLATION: There are more than 70 families who have been affected in this area and that might not be the exact numbers anymore because the terrain is still moving. The Civil Protection said that we don't have to be worried but they have only been talking. We don't have their presence here.
Tsunagi, Jul 9 (EFE / EPA) .- The torrential rain that began on the weekend and that extended throughout Japan on Wednesday left havoc in businesses and private properties.Rescuers are searching for missing people at Tsunagi, Kumamoto Prefecture on Japanese southwestern island of Kyusu, after landslide caused by torrential rain. 59 people are confirmed to be dead and another 16 missing by torrential rain and flood on Kyushu island. (Camera: KIMIMASA MAYAMA). FOOTAGE SHOWS POLICE RESCUERS SEARCH FOR MISSING PEOPLE IN TSUNAGI, KUMAMOTO PREFECTURE ON JAPANESE SOUTHWESTERN ISLAND OF KYUSU.
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).