Amazing rescue: Soldier hammers through roof to save baby from Brazil flood

Amazing rescue: Soldier hammers through roof to save baby from Brazil flood
Amazing rescue: Soldier hammers through roof to save baby from Brazil flood

Watch: Soldier hammers through roof to save baby from Brazil flood

Brazil’s military took to the skies to rescue families trapped in attics and on roofs by floodwater. One soldier used a brick to hammer through a roof to get to a baby and airlift it to safety. The baby’s face was blurred for privacy.

LAJEADO, Brazil – Deadly flooding filling up homes in southern Brazil chased families to the roofs and attics to wait and hope for rescue. Roofs are now the only islands in a muddy sea.

In the video above, an Army soldier is seen using a brick to hammer through the roof of a house to make the hole big enough to pull a baby to safety. He does this while suspended by a wire from a helicopter.

Another video shows dry-suit-clad rescuers gently placing a 4-month-old with pneumonia into a chopper, followed by his mother, to head to a hospital for treatment. Next, the helicopter hovers over the roof of a home, turned into an island, to pull two more babies to safety.

WATCH: BOAT SLAMS INTO BRIDGE, CAPSIZES AS DEATH TOLL RISES AMID CATASTROPHIC FLOODING IN SOUTHERN BRAZIL

Video after video from Army Aviation Command shows desperate residents waving down helicopters from on top of roofs with muddy water past the eaves. Drivers can be seen clinging to their dogs and hoods of cars, suffering from hypothermia and awaiting rescue.

Search and rescue crews have packed aircraft to capacity with children, moms, dads, seniors and dogs. One chopper held 30 survivors.

Deadly flooding

Two-thirds of the Rio Grande do Sur state is currently flooded, according to Civil Defense. That impacts nearly 800,000 people across the countryside, towns and cities. Many still in their homes have no water or electricity.

Aerial video: Whole cities underwater

Record rains left two-thirds of the Rio Grande do Sur state in Brazil flooded. Aerial video shows the city underwater.

As of midday Sunday, flooding killed 75 people and injured 155 more, while 103 are still missing. So far, more than 88,000 people have been evacuated, but shelters only hold 16,600 of them.

BRAZIL GOVERNOR WARNS OF ‘BIGGEST CLIMATE DISASTER’ TO COME

See it: Homeowners forced by flood to wait on roofs for rescue

A military helicopter flies over a village and spots someone who broke through her roof to wait on top of the house for rescue. Rescuers cram as many babies, adults and pets as possible into the aircraft.

Heavy, torrential rains have plagued the Rio Grande do Sul region for an entire week. The town of Bento Goncalves recorded more than 21 inches of rain in the storm, while several other gauges in the area reported over 19 inches of rain. The National Institute of Meteorology expects another 4 inches to fall on Sunday.

The Guaiba River in Puerto Alegre, the state capital, is 7 feet past flood stage at this point, the highest on record. The main airport remains closed. A hydroelectric dam burst Saturday, sending a 6-foot wave downstream and into communities.

Fourth major flood in 12 months

The state is still recovering from several deadly floods in the past year. An extratropical cyclone wreaked havoc in September 2023.

Aerial view of the area affected by an extratropical cyclone in Muçum, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, taken on September 5, 2023. Torrential rain and winds caused by an extratropical cyclone have left at least 27 people dead in southern Brazil, officials. The latest in a string of weather disasters to hit Brazil, it is the deadliest ever in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Governor Eduardo Leite told a news conference. (Getty Images)

A week of severe thunderstorms flooded southern Brazil in November 2023. Several municipalities declared a State of Emergency in July 2023 after storms dropped flooding rain. The BBC reported that the three previous tragedies together took 75 lives.

In a press conference, the governor of Rio Grande do Sur said the current flooding was the worst disaster in the state’s history.

 
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