More than 110 dead after flash floods in Indonesia and East Timor
Dozens more remain missing.
Dozens more remain missing.
Sydney’s main reservoir was filled to overflowing for the first time in 30 years, officials said.
Most of those missing were working at the two power plants. Some were trapped in two tunnels cut off by the floods and by mud and rocks.
At least 43 people are dead in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Tens of thousands of homes are without power, and hundreds of flights have been cancelled due to the storm.
The death toll currently stands at almost 60, but is expected to rise as rescue efforts continue.
Among the dead was an entire family of four Brazilian immigrants who drowned in their basement flat.
Four people have been confirmed dead in Colorado, and 80 remain unaccounted for, following “biblical” flash floods.
Relief teams are working to rescue tens of thousands of people who have been left stranded after flash floods and landslides.
In northern Jordan, relief workers distributing aid to Syrian refugees were injured in a “stampede” in a camp where hundreds of tents have been destroyed by the rains.
The Philippines’s capital has been turned into a “water world” in a deluge that has killed at least 23 people and forced hundreds of thousands to flee.
The tropical storm killed at least 650 people this weekend and left over 800 missing, according to the Red Cross.
More than 800 people are still missing after flash floods that swept away houses and splintered families.
Many people were killed as they slept in their beds and tropical storm tore through two cities.