Heavy rains in the south-west of Serbia caused floods in many villages and cities on 6-7 November, forcing some 300 families to leave their houses.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18966&record=2&last=6.
read more60,000 people were left homeless in Colombo and the suburbs. Some of the roads in the city were up to two metres (six feet) under water as drainage systems were unable to cope with the deluge.
Source: http://GLIDEnumber.net
See also: Sri Lanka floods leave 58,000 homeless (20/11/2009, Sydney Morning Herald/AFP)
In the Erbil and Dahuk Governorates over 3,000 persons (500 families) across ten locations in the mountainous districts of Mergasur, Rawanduz, Choman, Zhakho, Sumel, Aqra were affected by flash flooding following heavy rains and winds on 1 Nov 2009.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18963.
529 people affected by floods in municipality of Guapi, Cauca.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18961.
At least 186 people have been affected by heavy rains in Los Santos Province since late October.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18960.
Heavy rains have affected more than 680,000 people in Espirito Santo, southeastern Brazil. 4,500 people have been evacuated and 112,300 houses have suffered damages.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18959.
Floods due to heavy rain have killed 91 in the departments of Salvador, La Libertad, Cuscatlán, La Paz, San Vicente.
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18958.
UNOOSA/UN-SPIDER:
Email: un-spider [at] unoosa.org
Link: http://www.un-spider.org/
ReliefWeb:
Available maps for Hurricane Ida
Link:...
Floods caused by heavy rains have claimed 15 lives in Thailand's southernmost provinces of Songkhla, Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala.
http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18957.
Hundreds of families have been affected by floods in Encarnacion (Itapua), Ayolas (Misiones), Ciudad del Este (Alto Parana) e Ita Cora (Neembucu).
Source: http://www.glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18939&record=1&last=4495
Information on Reliefweb: http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/dbc.nsf/doc108?OpenForm&emid=FL-2009-000226-PRY
On 12 and 14 September 2009, two heavy torrential rains poured down in the capital N?Djamena leading to the flooding of almost half of the town. The stormy rains aggravated the already worse situation that started since the beginning of the rainy season. The most affected areas are Walia, Kamda, Toukra, Habena, Chagoua, and Moursal.The Red Cross of Chad?s urban committee conducted a rapid assessment and estimated that over 545 houses were destroyed.
Source: http://glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/details.jsp?glide=18925.