-
Syria says IS behind Damascus blasts, finds explosives cache
-
Foreigners among 12 dead in Spanish wildfire
-
Nasdaq dips as SK hynix arrives in NY
-
England advised to avoid alcohol after off-field dramas - report
-
Fiji captain shrugs off chairman's criticism ahead of England clash
-
Memorable moments from Paris Haute Couture Week
-
Hundreds welcome Salah's Egypt home after best World Cup run
-
Dust in the wind: intense storms struck China, US in 2025, says UN
-
Piercing, matcha rituals lead Noskova in Kvitova's footsteps
-
Finally healthy, music lover Muchova eyes Wimbledon glory
-
France wildfires burn twice as much land as last year: official
-
Muchova, Noskova put friendship on hold to fight for Wimbledon title
-
Mandhana's fifty lights up inaugural women's Test at Lord's
-
MEXC Launches VVIP Futures Loss Coverage Program 2.0 with 1,000,000 USDT Prize Pool
-
England World Cup winner Stiles died with brain injury, court told
-
Foreigners among 11 dead in Spanish wildfires
-
Stocks rise as SK hynix boosts AI trade
-
Volkswagen sales slide further as carmaker weighs mass job cuts
-
England bowl against India in historic first women's Test at Lord's
-
Gagan Gupta, man on a mission to industrialise Africa
-
Eleven dead, 19 missing as wildfire roars through southern Spain
-
Eleven dead, 19 missing as Spain wildfire roars through southern Spain
-
EU tells Meta to change Facebook, Instagram's 'addictive design'
-
Man nearly sucked out of 'detached' window on Ryanair flight
-
EasyJet accepts rival takeover bid from US investor Apollo
-
Record visitors, record taxes: Vienna cashes in on tourist boom
-
UK schools, mentors team up to rescue 'lost boys' with football
-
Landslides kill 15 in Philippines as biggest typhoon in decades nears Taiwan
-
India's choked pavements fail pedestrians
-
Jungle spirit: Myanmar fighters try to keep hope alive
-
It's coming home: Bayeux tapestry arrives in London in overnight operation
-
Beirne hails 'special moment' as he prepares to captain Ireland
-
Pacific Islands reject missile test in 'blue continent'
-
Indonesia says landfill fire near Jakarta extinguished
-
Wallabies skipper Wilson has full faith in rookie flyhalf
-
Spain aim for World Cup date with France by beating Belgium
-
Landslide kills five in Philippines as biggest typhoon in decades nears Taiwan
-
Bayeux Tapestry arrives in London after epic journey from France
-
Modi visits New Zealand as trade deal sparks India pushback
-
North Korea vows boost to nuclear buildup, military intelligence
-
Bayeux Tapestry to arrive in London after epic journey from France
-
H5 bird flu detected in Australian seabird for first time
-
Syria authorities say captured IS-linked cell behind blasts
-
Myanmar's pro-democracy revolution weakens five years on
-
Table for one: how Japan's 'Solitary Gourmet' became a TV hit
-
Hundreds flee homes in Taiwan ahead of biggest typhoon in decades
-
Australia's Big Bash League to open season in India
-
Asian stocks rally as SK hynix breathes life back into AI trade
-
Disappointment at Morocco's World Cup exit cannot mask pride
-
Humanitarians look to put the AI in aid
Angry protests erupt in flood-hit Libyan city
Hundreds of protesters rallied in Libya's disaster-hit Derna on Monday, accusing the authorities of neglect after a huge flash flood devastated the coastal city and swept thousands to their deaths.
Demonstrators gathered outside the city's grand mosque and chanted slogans against the parliament in east Libya and its leader Aguilah Saleh.
"The people want parliament to fall", "Aguila is the enemy of God", "The blood of martyrs is not shed in vain" and "Thieves and betrayers must hang", they shouted.
A statement read on behalf of the protesters urged "a speedy investigation and legal action against those responsible for the disaster".
They also demanded a United Nations office in Derna and the start of "the city's reconstruction, plus compensation for affected residents" and a probe into the current city council and previous budgets.
"Those who survived from the city, in what's left of the city, against the ones who brought death and destruction to the city," posted analyst Anas el-Gomati on X, formerly Twitter, under pictures of the destruction.
Politicians and analysts say the chaos in Libya since the 2011 fall and killing of Moamer Kadhafi has relegated the maintenance of vital infrastructure to the background.
On September 10, two dams in which cracks were reported as far back as 1998 burst after Storm Daniel hit eastern Libya, unleashing a devastating and deadly torrent that swept through Derna, a city of 100,000 people.
The flash flood killed nearly 3,300 people and left thousands more missing.
Tens of thousands of traumatised residents are homeless and badly need clean water, food and basic supplies amid a growing risk of cholera, diarrhoea, dehydration and malnutrition, UN agencies have warned.
- Disease outbreaks -
On Monday the UN warned that disease outbreaks could bring "a second devastating crisis".
Local officials, aid agencies and the World Health Organization "are concerned about the risk of disease outbreak, particularly from contaminated water and the lack of sanitation", the UN said.
Libya's disease control centre banned citizens in the disaster zone from drinking water from local mains, warning that it is "polluted".
Rescue teams from European and Arab countries kept up the grim search for bodies in the mud-caked wasteland of smashed buildings, crushed cars and uprooted trees.
The waters submerged a densely populated six-square-kilometre (2.3-square-mile) area in Derna, damaging 1,500 buildings of which 891 were totally razed, according to a preliminary report released by the Tripoli government based on satellite images.
"We grew up here, we were raised here... But we've come to hate this place, we've come to hate what it has become," said one bereaved Derna resident, Abdul Wahab al-Masouri.
Bulldozers cleared roads of mud, including at a mosque where a foul smell hung in the air and a woman prayed for children and grandchildren killed in the disaster.
Amid the chaos, the true death toll remained unknown, with untold numbers swept into the sea.
The health minister of the divided country's eastern administration, Othman Abdeljalil, has said 3,283 people were now confirmed dead in Derna.
Libyan officials and humanitarian groups have warned, however, that the final toll could be much higher.
- Field hospitals -
Emergency response teams and aid have been deployed from countries including Egypt, France, Greece, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.
Five members of a Greek rescue team were killed when their vehicle collided with a Libyan family's car on the Benghazi-to-Derna road on Sunday, officials said. Three members of the family also died.
Egypt has sent a helicopter carrier to the eastern Tobruk military base to serve as a field hospital with more than 100 beds, Egyptian media reported.
France has set up a field hospital in Derna.
On Monday, the UN, which has launched an emergency appeal for more than $71 million, said nine of its agencies were delivering aid and support to survivors.
The European Union said it was releasing 5.2 million euros (around $5.5 million) in humanitarian funding for Libya, bringing total EU aid so far to more than 5.7 million euros.
Libya has been split between two rival governments -- a UN-backed administration in the capital Tripoli and another in the disaster-hit east -- since the NATO-backed uprising 12 years ago.
On Monday the Tripoli-based government said it began work on a temporary bridge over the river that cuts through Derna.
UN experts have blamed the high death toll on climatic factors as the Mediterranean region has sweltered under an unusually hot summer, and on the legacy of Libya's war.
M.White--AT