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Israeli rescue team in Brazil finds bodies after dam rupture, but no survivors

The Jewish state was the only nation to send a search-and-rescue team.

An Israel Defense Forces' search-and-rescue team in Brazil assists in locating victims of the Brumadinho dam collapse. Source: IDF Twitter.
An Israel Defense Forces’ search-and-rescue team in Brazil assists in locating victims of the Brumadinho dam collapse. Source: IDF Twitter.

More than 100 Israeli soldiers from the IDF Home Front Command who were sent to Brazil to help search-and-rescue teams hunt for hundreds of missing people will be returning home within the next 48 hours, having recovered at least 20 bodies, but finding no survivors.

Approximately 60 hours after a dam belonging to the Vale ore-mining company collapsed and flooded Brumadinho, a team of Israeli soldiers, officers, engineers, doctors and rescue personnel arrived in Brazil to take part in the search effort.

Israel was the only country to send a search-and-rescue team.

The Israelis concentrated in areas believed to be heavily populated at the time of the dam collapse and resulting mudslide—a restaurant containing at least 140 diners, a bus transporting approximately 40 passengers, a minibus and a hostel.

The team was also accompanied by an army psychologist, who helped the personnel deal with the traumatic sights and experiences of the tragedy.

“One of the bodies we recovered turned out to be a partner of the driver who drove us to the disaster area,” Lt. Col. Sagi Baruch told Ynet. “We saw a picture of her in his car and realized who she was. He burst out crying, and said that he knew from the start she didn’t survive.”

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