Three Weeks After the Heat: Southern Cordilia Struggles to Bury Its Dead as Recovery Inches Forward
Alkantara, Krauanagaz— Three weeks after the historic heatwave that killed millions across Southern Cordilia, recovery efforts are slowly gaining traction as Zuhlgan’s unprecedented opening to international aid begins to show tangible results. Yet officials on both sides of the border warn that the crisis is far from over, with disease outbreaks emerging, mass burials continuing, and the psychological scars of the catastrophe likely to persist for generations.
In Zuhlgan, the month of mourning declared by Arkava Ga’klar Ibinete IV has passed its halfway point, with state media continuing to broadcast only somber programming. In Krauanagaz, President Thalira Renkara has announced an extension of the national emergency through June, acknowledging that recovery will take “years, not months.”
“We are no longer in survival mode,” Renkara said in a briefing this morning. “But we are not yet in recovery mode. We are somewhere in between— buried in grief, overwhelmed by need, and struggling to find a path forward. The heat has stopped killing. But the aftermath is only beginning.”
The most urgent task facing both nations remains the dignified recovery and burial of the deceased. In Zuhlgan, where the death toll is estimated to exceed fifteen million according to international observers— the Zuhlgani government has still not released official figures— the work is proceeding slowly despite the influx of foreign aid workers.
“We have recovered perhaps 40 percent of the dead,” said a World Forum relief coordinator speaking from a staging area in Kurthez. “The remainder are still where they fell— in homes, in vehicles, in the streets. In some areas, the bodies have begun to skeletonize, making identification nearly impossible. We are doing triage: recover those who can be identified, document those who cannot, and bury everyone with as much dignity as the circumstances allow.”
Mass graves have become the unfortunate standard across the hardest-hit regions. In Zuhlgan’s Prira Province, where entire towns reported 100 percent mortality, foreign aid workers have established large-scale burial sites using heavy equipment provided by the WF and international aid groups.
“We are not doing individual graves,” the coordinator said. “There is no time. There is no space. There are no surviving family members to object. We are burying the dead in rows, in trenches, with markers indicating the location and, where known, the names of those interred. It is not what anyone wanted. But it is what the situation demands.”
In Krauanagaz, where the death toll is now confirmed to exceed 2,000,000, Federation Health officials announced that the last of the mass graves has been completed. Moving forward, individual burials will resume where possible.
“We have buried our dead with dignity under impossible circumstances,” Health Secretary Alara Vezhkal said. “Now we must turn our attention to the living.”
As feared, secondary disease outbreaks have begun to emerge, particularly in areas where water infrastructure remains compromised and where decomposing bodies were not recovered quickly.
The Cordilian Epidemiology Network (CEN) confirmed today that at least three distinct disease outbreaks are now active in Southern Zuhlgan including acute watery diarrhea, linked to contaminated drinking water, with over 12,000 reported cases and 400 deaths. Typhoid fever, concentrated in areas where sewage systems collapsed, with approximately 3,500 cases confirmed. As well as various respiratory infections, exacerbated by dust from dried-up water sources and particulate matter from decomposing organic material, affecting hundreds of thousands.
“We are seeing the beginning of a secondary health crisis,” said a CEN epidemiologist on the ground in Ozákla. “The heatwave killed millions. What comes next— disease, malnutrition, the collapse of routine medical care— could kill hundreds of thousands more if not brought under control quickly.”
The WF has deployed mobile medical units to the affected areas, focusing on water purification, vaccination campaigns, and the distribution of oral rehydration salts. However, access remains limited in the most remote locations.
Infrastructure restoration continues at a painstaking pace. In Zuhlgan, the Ministry of Technical Blessings announced today that power has been restored to approximately 65 percent of affected areas, up from just 20 percent two weeks ago. However, the southernmost provinces of Prira and parts of Ozákla Province remain partially or entirely without electricity.
“Every day, we reconnect a few more neighborhoods,” a ministry spokesperson said. “But every day, we also discover new damage— transformers that failed, lines that melted, substations that were looted for copper. This will take months, not weeks.”
Water restoration has proven even more challenging. Many pumping stations were offline for so long that they require complete overhauls. In the interim, the World Forum is trucking in millions of liters of potable water daily— a logistical operation of immense scale.
“We are moving more water than any civilian operation in Cordilian history,” a WF logistics coordinator said. “But it is still not enough. People are drinking from contaminated sources because they have no choice. That is why we are seeing disease outbreaks. Until the taps flow clean again, we will be fighting a losing battle.”
Beyond the physical infrastructure, the human infrastructure of Southern Cordilia has been shattered. Approximately 4.5 million people remain displaced across both nations, living in temporary shelters, with host families, or in the open air.
In Krauanagaz, the Federation has begun transitioning from emergency shelters to longer-term housing solutions, including prefabricated housing units and repurposed government buildings. However, officials acknowledge that many of the displaced will never return to their original homes, because those homes no longer exist or because the communities they belonged to have been wiped out.
“Home is not just a building,” said a Federation social worker in South Zhzoatal Province. “Home is your neighbors. Your village. Your cemetery. Your temple. All of that is gone for so many people. We can give them a roof. We cannot give them back their lives.”
Mental health services are being scaled up across the region, though the need far exceeds the available resources. NLL has deployed trauma counselors to the hardest-hit areas, but many survivors are reluctant to speak about what they experienced.
“I do not need a counselor,” said a survivor from Kurthez now living in an Ozákla shelter. “I need my family. I need my neighbors. I need everyone I ever knew to come back from the dead. Since that cannot happen, I do not need anything. I just need to be left alone.”
In Zuhlgan, the month of mourning continues. State media broadcasts daily memorial services, and the clergy has called for continued prayers and fasting. The Arkava has appeared in several pre-recorded addresses, each time appearing more gaunt and exhausted.
“We are halfway through this month of tears,” the Arkava said in his most recent address, broadcast last night. “But our tears will not stop when the month ends. They will continue for years. For decades. For the rest of our lives. We have lost millions. We have lost entire bloodlines. We have lost the future that those millions represented. That loss cannot be mourned in a month. It cannot be mourned in a lifetime. It will be mourned forever.”
The Arkava also addressed the presence of foreign aid workers, acknowledging the difficulty of the decision while defending it as necessary.
“I know that some among us resent the presence of outsiders,” he said. “I understand that instinct. I share it. But I also know that we cannot bury our dead alone. We cannot purify our water alone. We cannot rebuild our nation alone. We are accepting help— not because we are weak, but because we are wise enough to recognize our limits. That is not shame. That is survival.”
In Krauanagaz, President Renkara has pivoted from the immediate emergency response to longer-term planning. Today, she announced the formation of the National Commission on Climate Resilience, a nonpartisian body tasked with reviewing the government’s response to the heatwave and making recommendations for preventing future climate catastrophes.
“We failed the people of the valleys,” Renkara said bluntly. “We failed them because we did not understand the risk. We failed them because we did not communicate the danger effectively. We failed them because we did not have evacuation plans for communities that could not evacuate themselves. We must understand those failures. We must document them. And we must ensure that no future administration repeats them.”
The commission, which includes scientists, disaster management experts, and opposition lawmakers, is expected to deliver a preliminary report within six months.
The World Forum has announced that international pledges for heatwave recovery now exceed 18 billion Pacifican Dollars, though officials caution that disbursement has been slow due to logistical challenges and the difficulty of coordinating with Zuhlgani authorities.
“Money is not the limiting factor,” said a WF official. “Access is. Personnel are. The ability to move supplies from ports to people is. We have more funds than we can effectively spend right now. That will change as infrastructure improves. But for now, the bottleneck is on the ground, not in the bank accounts.”
The WF has announced that it will maintain its current deployment levels through the summer, with a gradual drawdown anticipated in the fall.
As May progresses toward June, the immediate threat of heat has passed. But the long shadow of the catastrophe will stretch across Southern Cordilia for years to come.
“We are three weeks into a recovery that will take a decade,” said Dr. Halima Vosk of the Cordilian Institute of Health Sciences. “The bodies will eventually be buried. The water will eventually flow. The power will eventually return. But the absence, the millions of absences, will never be filled. That is the true legacy of this heatwave. Not the infrastructure that was destroyed, but the people who were lost. And people cannot be rebuilt.”
In Ozákla, in Tatallap, in the ghost towns of Prira and the empty valleys of South Zhzoatal, the survivors continue their slow, painful march toward an uncertain future.
“We are still here,” said the survivor from Kurthez, speaking to a Global Watch reporter as she sat outside her shelter. “I do not know why. My family is not here. My neighbors are not here. My whole world is not here. But I am still here. I do not know what to do with that. I do not know what to do with any of this. But I am still here. For now. That is all I have.”
