KUALA
LUMPUR, Dec 31, (AFP) - At least 21 people have
been killed and eight others are missing after the worst flooding in decades
across Malaysia's northeast, police said Wednesday, with almost a quarter of a
million people displaced.They said 14 of the deaths were recorded in the
worst-hit state of Kelantan, where some 158,476 people were displaced.
Four people died in
Terengganu and three in Pahang state. There are also reports of outbreaks of
flu and diarrhoea.The number forced from their homes in the other affected
states -- Pahang, Perak, Terengganu and Johor -- totalled 83,570.Forecasters
Wednesday predicted clear skies for the next three days.
"But we are still in
the northeast monsoon period until March. We could expect heavy showers later
in the week," a meteorological department official said.Floodwaters have
began to subside in many areas but authorities are bracing for possible disease
outbreaks.Noor Hisham Abdullah, health ministry director-general, said there
was no major rise in flood-related diseases at the moment.
"We anticipate that
flood victims will come in masses seeking care once the floodwaters start to
recede," he said in a Facebook posting.Rajbans Singh, president of the
Malaysian Wellness Society, told AFP that floods can increase the transmission
of typhoid fever, cholera, leptospirosis, malaria and dengue.The government has
been criticised for it slow response after many victims were caught stranded in
outlying areas without food and clean water.
Prime Minister Najib
Razak, who came under fire after being filmed playing golf with US President
Barack Obama in Hawaii when the disaster happened, said he was saddened by the
flooding."I see so much destruction. It is depressing and sad," he
said.Najib is criss-crossing flood-hit areas and coordinating aid activities.
Ee Su Chuong, 42, the
owner of an auto repair shop in Kota Bharu in Kelantan, said many people were
taking advantage of the sunny day to clean their mud-filled homes after
floodwaters receded.
"But they will return to the relief centres to spend the
night because they are unable to cook on their own as most provision shops are
still closed," he told AFP.
The National Security
Council admitted there were delays in its relief efforts, saying this was
partly because some of its staff were flood victims."Due to the magnitude
of the floods, most districts were completely inundated. Our entire district
machinery collapsed as they (staff) had become victims themselves,"
council secretary Mohamed Thajudeen Abdul Wahab was quoted as saying by the
Star newspaper.
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