Colombia On December 1, 2016, heavy rains in
Cali triggered a landslide that claimed at least six lives. All the fatalities took place in the Siloe neighborhood where 14 homes were destroyed. During the overnight of March 31 – April 1, heavy rain affected parts of the
Putumayo Department. A total of of rain fell within a few hours near the city of
Mocoa. This caused the
Mocoa,
Sangoyaco, and
Mulata rivers to overflow and send
mudflows towards residences and infrastructure in the city of Mocoa by 3:00 a.m. Multiple neighborhoods were
devastated in the disaster, with numerous residents caught off-guard. By the morning of 6 April, at least 301 people were known dead (including 92 children), more than 400 were injured (including 167 children), Higher elevation regions including
Quito experienced severe rains, landslides, and sinkholes towards the tail end of the Coastal Niño event as the
ITCZ began moving north towards its more usual latitude.
Peru Much of the
coastal desert region of Peru was particularly hard-hit with incessant, heavy rains starting in January 2017. Most impacted were the regions of
Tumbes,
Piura, and
Lambayeque where a state of emergency was declared on February 3, 2017. These equatorial parts of Peru are typically dry throughout the summer but can be greatly impacted by climatic changes when adjacent ocean warms and the
equatorial trough oscillates further north. During these occurrences,
monsoon-like rains can fall in usually bone-dry ecosystems causing mudslides locally known as
huaycos. The 2017 Coastal Niño was the worst to hit Peru since 1925. leaving approximately 178,000 people homeless. A total of 113 people were killed, 354 were injured, and a further 18 were missing. More than 2,500 kilometers (1,500 miles) of roads were destroyed and an estimated 1.1 million people have been directly affected by the floods. The
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs noted that 3 million people were at-risk for waterborne diseases. On March 16, a mudflow buried the village of Barbablanca; however, all 160 residents escaped. On March 27, 2017, the
Piura River broke its banks and flooded the city of
Piura and the towns of
Catacaos and
Pedregal Chico. In Piura, of rain fell in one day, three times the city's annual average and Catacaos had flood waters rise to high. Further south,
La Libertad,
Áncash, and
Lima were also impacted.
Trujillo experienced severe localized flooding in its ravines and
Huarmey was badly flooded.
Elsewhere In
Brazil, Heavy rains on March 11–13, 2017, including in 24 hours, caused flooding across
Rio Grande do Sul, killing 2 people, injuring 70, and leaving 10 others missing. Further south, in
Chile, unusually heavy rains affected areas around
Santiago starting in February 2017. Flooding and landslides killed at least eighteen people and left few others missing. == Disasters ==