-
Man City win as Inter stay perfect, Barca held in Champions League
-
French superstar DJ Snake wants new album to 'build bridges'
-
Barca rescue draw at Club Brugge in six-goal thriller
-
Foden hits top form as Man City thrash Dortmund
-
NBA officials brief Congress committee over gambling probe
-
Inter beat Kairat Almaty to maintain Champions League perfection
-
Newcastle sink Bilbao to extend Champions League winning run
-
Wall Street stocks rebound after positive jobs data
-
LPGA, European tour partner with Saudis for new Vegas event
-
Eyes turn to space to feed power-hungry data centers
-
Jazz lose Kessler for season with shoulder injury
-
League scoring leader Messi among MLS Best XI squad
-
MLS bans Suarez for Miami's winner-take-all playoff match
-
McIlroy appreciates PGA of America apology for Ryder Cup abuse
-
Garnacho equaliser saves Chelsea in Qarabag draw
-
Promotions lift McDonald's sales in tricky consumer market
-
Five things to know about New York's new mayor
-
Anisimova beats Swiatek to reach WTA Finals last four
-
US Supreme Court appears skeptical of Trump tariff legality
-
AC Milan post third straight annual profit on day of San Siro purchase
-
Angelina Jolie visits Ukrainian frontline city, media reports say
-
UN says forests should form key plank of COP30
-
Star designer Rousteing quits fashion group Balmain
-
Mexico's Sheinbaum steps up cartel fight after murder of anti-narco mayor
-
Attack on funeral in Sudan's Kordofan region kills 40: UN
-
Key PSG trio set for spell on sidelines
-
Democrats punch back in US elections - and see hope for 2026
-
BMW reports rising profitability, shares jump
-
US Supreme Court debates legality of Trump's tariffs
-
Bolivia Supreme Court orders release of jailed ex-president Jeanine Anez
-
Wall Street stocks rise after positive jobs data
-
'Hostage diplomacy': longstanding Iran tactic presenting dilemma for West
-
Rybakina stays perfect at WTA Finals with win over alternate Alexandrova
-
Le Garrec welcomes Dupont help in training for Springboks showdown
-
Brussels wants high-speed rail linking EU capitals by 2040
-
Swiss business chiefs met Trump on tariffs: Bern
-
At least 9 dead after cargo plane crashes near Louisville airport
-
France moves to suspend Shein website as first store opens in Paris
-
Spain's exiled king recounts history, scandals in wistful memoir
-
Wall Street stocks steady after positive jobs data
-
Trump blasts Democrats as government shutdown becomes longest ever
-
Indian pilgrims find 'warm welcome' in Pakistan despite tensions
-
Inter and AC Milan complete purchase of San Siro
-
Swedish authorities inspect worksite conditions at steel startup Stegra
-
Keys withdraws from WTA Finals with illness
-
Prince Harry says proud to be British despite new life in US
-
BMW boosts profitability, welcomes Nexperia signals
-
EU strikes last-ditch deal on climate targets as COP30 looms
-
Stocks retreat as tech bubble fears grow
-
Shein opens first permanent store amid heavy police presence
In Brazil, a damaged city lives on edge of abyss
A few steps from a cliff-edge, Deusimar Batista is hanging clothes to dry in her yard. Near it, a neighbor's house used to stand on a residential street, but they have all collapsed into the abyss.
Batista is from the city of Buriticupu, in northeastern Brazil, where residents are living a nightmare: the earth beneath them is literally breaking open into enormous craters, which have swallowed streets, houses and even killed people.
"It used to be really nice here," said Batista, a slight 54-year-old who works as a seamstress.
"But now it's like this -- all destroyed," she told AFP, motioning to the gorge that now marks the edge of her yard, empty except for some trash at the bottom.
Experts say the rare phenomenon is caused by deforestation and a lack of urban planning in the city of 70,000 people, located in the impoverished state of Maranhao.
Buriticupu, which sits at the edge of the Amazon rainforest, expanded quickly in the 1970s as the site of a housing program for rural workers.
Rampant logging has decimated the region's trees, and with them the soil's ability to absorb rainwater, according to scientists.
That, coupled with a lack of adequate drainage systems, has caused erosion that looks like something out of a horror film.
Locals call the giant craters "vocorocas," which means "torn earth" in the Indigenous Tupi–Guarani language.
- Gaping craters -
They start as small cracks in the ground, but tend to expand with heavy rain, growing into gaping craters.
Seen from the sky, they look like big red- and orange-hued canyons swallowing pieces of the city as they advance.
The mayor's office says seven people have died falling into the craters since they began to form two decades ago.
Around 50 houses have collapsed into them, and more than 300 others are risk, it says.
The city declared a state of emergency last month, seeking funds from the state and federal governments for infrastructure projects to fight the erosion.
In all, there are 26 craters in the city, the deepest of which reaches 70 meters (230 feet), according to authorities.
Rainy nights have become a source of terror for Batista.
"I can't sleep when it rains. I stay awake all night," she said.
"I'm afraid of going to sleep and dying if there's a collapse."
- 'It's come to this' -
Erosion happens in every city, said Augusto Carvalho Campos, a geographer at Maranhao Federal University.
But in Buriticupu, the issue is "much bigger," due to "rapid urban growth without the necessary planning, a lack of sanitation and drainage infrastructure, and deforestation," he said.
Deforestation has surged in the region over the past several decades, driven by the logging industry, with devastating impact on the soil, he said.
The problem has been exacerbated by the fact that many "vocorocas" are de facto drainage or sewage channels, causing further erosion.
"The city needs major engineering projects to contain the erosion process, and also reforestation at the edges of the 'vocorocas,'" said Carvalho Campos.
But "first and foremost," he said, the city should resettle families living near the craters.
Mayor Joao Carlos Teixeira is promising major drainage and soil-treatment projects.
"The federal government has made clear it is committed to making this area safe," he said.
But local residents are doubtful.
"The authorities have never bothered to do anything about the problem, and now it's come to this," said Isaias Neres, president of a local residents' association.
- 'Just like thunder' -
Standing at the edge of a 60-meter abyss, Maria dos Santos says she is afraid of being inside her own home.
"There was no crater here before. It started recently, less than three years ago," said Dos Santos, 45, standing on a patch of cracked road that has partly collapsed into the gorge.
There is no protective barrier around the crater, one of the biggest in the city, even though children often play nearby.
Dos Santos's meager, mud-walled house is among those at risk of collapsing into the chasm.
Rainstorms make her panic, too, she said.
"We're afraid of dying here... When the collapses happen, it sounds just like thunder," she said.
But she and her family have nowhere else to go, she said.
"We're in God's hands."
D.AbuRida--SF-PST