
"We have nine bodies and a lot of people are still missing," Dr Alex
Munamua at the Solomons' National Referral Hospital told AFP. Local media said about 30 people remained unaccounted for following Thursday's flooding.
As about 10,000 people packed into emergency shelters, the Red Cross
secretary general in the Solomons, Joanne Zoleveke, described the
devastation as a
tragedy none of us saw coming.
- The city's main river, the Matanikau, burst its banks in a torrential tropical storm late Thursday, sweeping away riverside communities, bringing down bridges and inundating the downtown area.
- "We were watching the river but never expected it to rise so fast. It took us by surprise. That is why there are deaths," Zoleveke said.

"I witnessed a mother and two children swept away in their home," he said as the newspaper described the devastation as "the worst disaster the nation has seen".
World Vision's Emergency Response Manager in the Solomon Islands,
Lawrence Hillary, told Fairfax News the organisation was particularly
concerned about the welfare of children.
Aid workers feared outbreaks of disease in the sodden city and were
waiting for Honiara's Henderson International Airport to reopen so
emergency relief supplies could be flown in.

The loss of the bridges prevented officials from getting a look at
the scale of destruction in outlying areas where landslides and floods
were also reported.
As Solomon Islanders battled the floodwaters they were also shaken by
a strong 6.0 magnitude earthquake late on Friday, but there were no
reports of any damage.
Source: Agency
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