Earth Changes
One man died when he was dragged away by a swollen river and five people were killed in road accidents caused by the rain, said the mayor of Cotagaita in the southern Potosi department.
After days of heavy rain, the flooding was reported in areas around Zacuiba, Camiri and Villamontes in Gran Chaco province.
Bolivia's Deputy Minister of Civil Defence, Carlos Eduardo Brú, said that at least 50,000 people in seven of the country's nine departments have been left homeless. The hardest-hit areas are near the southern border with Paraguay and Argentina.
Rural and Land Development Minister Cesar Cacarico said the flooding has also damaged 33,000 fields.
During a visit to the town of Tupiza in Potosi department, President Evo Morales promised to help victims rebuild and to provide farmers with seeds.

Firefighters with the Upper Kingsclear Fire Department were called to a house in Lake George southwest of Fredericton on Saturday after a 'bigboom' was heard.
The explosion happened shortly before 9 p.m. at 19 Sunset Cove Lane in Lake George, about 50 kilometres southwest of Fredericton.
"Whatever caused it, it destroyed one room, blew the three garage doors out and blew a couple of windows out of the house," said Murray Crouse, fire chief with the Upper Kingsclear Fire Department.
A hotel in Hualien has collapsed following the earthquake, Reuters reported, citing the Taiwanese government.
Images posted online appear to show the first floor of the hotel severely damaged, with parts of the building crumbling onto the sidewalk.
The hotel that collapsed is the Marshal Hotel, according to Taiwan Observer. Rescue teams have been deployed to the scene.
Snowstorms have blocked 38 roads, according to the ministry, which was quoted by Moroccan news outlet Hespress.
The Ministry has managed to open 44 roads in various regions of the country after they were blocked due to heavy snowstorms.
Among the national roads that are still blocked: Road N. 13, which links between Azrou, Tamhidit and Medelt, and the road N19 that links in Tindara.
The Meteorological Agency says snow clouds are persisting due to a minus 12 degrees Celsius air mass hovering some 1,500 meters above the region. It says this kind of cold air mass usually comes just once in several years.
As of 1PM Tuesday, 1.58 meters of snowfall had accumulated in Hakusan City, 1.34 meters in Fukui City, and 68 centimeters in Kanazawa City.
In Fukui, the snowfall was the heaviest since 1981 and more than 6 times the average.
Comment: Supplementary information from the same website:
1,500 vehicles stuck in heavy snow
About 1,500 cars and trucks are stuck on a 10-kilometer section of a road in Fukui Prefecture due to a snowstorm on Tuesday.
A team of rescuers from the Ground Self-Defense Force arrived at the scene in Awara City around 3:15 PM, following a request from Fukui Governor Issei Nishikawa.
The rescuers plan to clear the snow and provide food for people in the vehicles.
Following a 37-year spell of no snow which ended in December 2016, Ain Sefra in the country's northwest, has seen snow no less than four times.
Children could be seen playing on the snow-covered sand dunes just outside the town, while others posed on the snow to document the rare event.
The town was seen covered with a coating of snow and many locals took to the nearby sand dunes to enjoy the unusual weather.
While Monday's snowfall was unusual, the town was covered in the white stuff last month, the third time in nearly 40 years.
Comment: See also this report of the first event earlier this year: Snowfall over the Sahara Desert - second winter in a row!
The woman, who had sustained numerous bite wounds, was found lying inside a home on Frank Bath Road in Middelburg.
"Paramedics assessed the woman and found that she had sustained numerous bite wounds which left her in a critical condition," said ER24 spokesman Russel Meiring.
"Treatment and advanced life support interventions were immediately initiated in an effort to stabilise her vital signs. Whilst treatment was under way, paramedics found that the patient's vital signs rapidly diminished.

In this photo provided by KCCI-TV, emergency personnel tend to vehicles on Interstate 35 in Ames, Iowa, after dozens of vehicles collided on the snow-covered freeway Monday.
Authorities say a 50- to 70-car pileup Monday on Interstate 35 north of Des Moines claimed a life and left several others critically injured.
The Iowa fatalities included:
Two sisters, ages 13 and 17, who died in a collision in Winneshiek County, according to the Des Moines Register. Four other teenagers, ages 14 and 15, were injured and hospitalized.
Two men died and a third was injured in a crash on Interstate 380 in Cedar Rapids.
Another man died in a crash on Interstate 80 near Grinnell.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol said the crashes in that state started Sunday afternoon as snow began falling. Less than 2 inches accumulated, but the snow quickly turned to ice as temperatures plummeted into the single digits.
The largest crash happened on Interstate 44 near Marshfield, about 150 miles southeast of Kansas City. Besides the 60 to 80 damaged vehicles, another two dozen vehicles were blocked and unable to move, said patrol Sgt. Jason Pace. The pileup killed a 55-year-old man from Glendora, California, whose name wasn't immediately released. The Interstate was closed for several hours while crews cleared the wreckage.
Pace said almost 350 crashes and 50 to 55 injuries were reported in the 18-county area he is responsible for in the southwest part of the state.
The AP-6 has been closed from kilometre 60 to 110 heading to Madrid due to ice, while a lorry has tipped over on the A-1 forcing its closure.
Parts of Alicante are also experiencing slow traffic, especially on the A-79 and A-31.
The bad weather is expected to continue until at least Wednesday, with more snow in northern and central Spain and Cataluña as well as parts of Andalucia.
A full list of the roads affected can be found here.
Even the football has been affected by the drop in temperatures.
According to fishermen, the ocean has receded as a result of the recent lunar eclipse, thereby, exposing the submerged pits and other material underneath. As there were no tides towards the western side of the beach, the visitors on Sunday enjoyed the evening at the seaside.
Rushikonda is one of the most popular beaches in Visakhapatnam, where thousands of people rush to the beach particularly during the week-ends. According to the scientists of the National Institute of Oceanography, there was nothing to panic when the sea recedes.
However, rumours spread out fast that a tsunami would be expected anytime. Some of the fishermen predicting that the city would be hit by something like a tsunami and the sea will be receded over 50 to 100 metres.
Speaking to The Hans India here on Sunday, scientists said that there was no technical evidence that the sea would recede before the tsunami. Due to the tidal phenomenon and the impact of the local winds, the sea and the blue waters would recede.
"There are several meteorological reasons for the receding of the sea. The tides will come close to the beach and the beach has eroded due to several reasons. Some of the huts of the fishermen were damaged and trees on the beach uprooted due to the heavy tides coming close to the beach.
Similarly, the blue waters will recede and the stones and others which have been submerged earlier could be seen. The blue waters will be affected again before and after the full-moon day," one of the NIO scientists said.
Comment: See also:
- Venice water levels lowest since records began - and it's sinking (PHOTOS)
- Sea recedes in unusually strong syzygy in Santa Elena, Ecuador
- Receding ocean, huge waves and lenticular 'fireball' cloud in South America
- Meteotsunami? Ocean dramatically recedes on South American Atlantic coast as huge waves batter the Pacific side













Comment: There have been a number of strong and shallow earthquakes in the last month, for more details see: M5.4 shallow earthquake strikes Taiwan, long and powerful tremors reported (VIDEO)
Update - 7 February 2018
RT reports that at least four people have been killed and more than 220 others injured, while about 145 remain missing following yesterday's earthquake. At least five buildings collapsed, China Global Television Network (CGTN) reported. Images posted online appear to show the first floor of the Marshal Hotel in Hualien severely damaged, with parts of the building crumbling onto the sidewalk. Rescue efforts continue.
Another M6.4 quake struck Taiwan on the same day (6th February) two years ago causing widespread damage and 117 deaths.