160,000 Malaysians hit by floods as PM visits
December 27, 2014Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak on Saturday oversaw the flood response effort in the state of Kelantan. He was due to visit flood victims after having cut short his holiday to the United States.
Pictures of him playing golf in Hawaii with US President Barack Obama prompted public outrage from Malaysians who accused him of being absent while the situation worsened.
At lease five people have been killed and about 160,000 people have been displaced in Malaysia's worst flooding in decades.
From the air, areas near Kota Bharu, the state capital of Kelantan, resembled a muddy lake with rows of rooftops the only indication of the streets below. The other worst-affected states are Terengganu and Pahang.
The northeastern regions of Malaysia regularly endure flooding in the annual monsoon season but the rains this year have been unusually heavy.
Rescue and relief efforts have been made more difficult by the strong currents and rapidly rising waters. Some victims of the flooding expressed anger at authorities, saying they had been slow to provide assistance.
"I am angry with them [the government]. We don't care about their politics. We just want the government to do what they should do and help us," 23-year-old Farhana Suhada, who had abandoned her home and was sheltering at a relief center outside Kota Bharu, told news agency AFP.
se/shs (AFP, Reuters, dpa, AP)