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Floods worsen in southern
Malaysia, 50,000 homeless
By Reuters
Kuala Lumpur
- Around 50,000 people have been forced to evacuate their flooded
homes in southern Malaysia as the region suffered its heaviest
rainfall in a century, news reports said on Thursday.
The rains, blamed on Typhoon Utor,
triggered large-scale flooding, cut off several towns in the
southern state of Johor, shut down power and water supplies and
disrupted train services.
One passenger bus fell into a
ravine early on Thursday in the southern town of Kota Tinggi but
none of the six people on board were injured, the online edition of
the Star newspaper said.
Official news agency Bernama put
the total number of evacuees in Johor and three neighboring states
at 50,000, up sharply from 30,000 a day earlier.
The Meteorological Services
Department said more rains were forecast in Johor and the
northeastern states of Kelantan and Terengganu over the next 24
hours.
Science Minister Jamaluddin Jarjis
blamed the downpours on strong winds from the western Pacific Ocean.
"The phenomenon is due to the
effects of Typhoon Utor near the Philippines," he said. The typhoon
killed 27 people in the Philippines last week.
Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister
Najib Razak was in Johor on Thursday to visit flood victims, many of
them taking shelter in schools and community halls.
Johor is one of Malaysia's biggest
producers of rubber and palm oil. There was no immediate word on the
impact on crops in the state, but palm oil prices have risen on
fears of supply disruption. -- Reuters
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