Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Flash floods inundate central Europe

Rescue workers sought to clear flood-borne debris including damaged cars and evacuate victims after heavy rains and stormy winds across central Europe killed at least 15 people over the weekend.

As many as 11 people have been killed by flooding that hit western Poland, the Czech Republic and eastern Germany after torrential rains soaked the region on Saturday, cutting off some towns and villages, washing away bridges, breaking through a dam and swamping roads. Water levels have risen to record highs on the borders of Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic. Thousands have been evacuated.

Heavy downpours on Saturday caused rivers to overflow their banks and a dam to burst, submerging Bogatynia and other towns in the southwest corner of Poland and killing at least three people, Polish officials said on Sunday.

One woman drowned in Bogatynia on Saturday. The body of another woman and a 55-year-old rescuer swept away by a dam burst on Saturday were found on Sunday.

Flood damage and deaths also were reported in neighboring countries. The death toll in the Czech Republic grew to five on Sunday and another three were missing and feared drowned, the Polish PAP news agency said.

On Saturday, three people died in the German town of Neukirchen, near the Czech border.
In neighboring Lithuania, falling trees and structures killed four and injured several, with thousands being left without electricity after storm winds hit the country on Sunday, the rescue service said.

A 22-year-old woman died while camping in southern Lithuania when a tree fell on her tent, the daily Lietuvos Rytas newspaper reported on its website.

The army, police and fire-service rescuers were using amphibious vehicles, helicopters and heavy earth-moving equipment to
evacuate flood victims and clear debris including damaged cars blocking narrow streets.

News channel TVN24 reported Prime Minister Donald Tusk pledging financial aid to the flood victims identical to that offered to those who suffered during this May and June floods.

The victims are to get a one-off allowance of 6,000 zlotys $2,000) for current emergency needs and up to 100,000 zlotys (more than $33,000) for home repairs.

Weather officials told TVN24 that the violent downpour caused the Miedzianka to overflow its banks.

 

BURST DAM
 
The waters submerged most of Bogatynia before flowing into the Nysa, the border river between Poland and Germany, swelling
further because of a burst reservoir dam.

Meteorologists in Poland do not forecast further heavy downpours.

The weekend deluge followed major spring and summer flooding across Poland which caused widespread property damage and claimed some two dozen lives.

In Germany, authorities at the weekend evacuated some 1,400 people around the town of Goerlitz (left), on the border with Poland, where they expected the flooding level to rise after topping 7 meters (23 feet).

Television footage showed water gushing along a main road in Goerlitz. Elsewhere in eastern Germany, flood levels eased.

In the Czech Republic, extra rescue personnel and soldiers were called in to help with evacuation from some of the worst affected
towns in the north of the country, and helicopters were used to reach villages cut off by the swollen rivers.

Thousands of residents in northern Czech Republic remained without electricity and gas on Sunday.

President Vaclav Klaus is expected to visit the region later on Sunday and the government will meet on Monday to discuss releasing emergency funds to help in clean-up efforts.

While the rains had eased by early Sunday afternoon and river levels were falling, many Czech villages were cut off, trains were not running and the muddy conditions made it difficult to get trucks and rescue personnel to the hardest-hit areas to deliver assistance.

Storms and high winds left several regions in eastern Slovakia with no electricity on Saturday, but no major damage, casualties or injuries were reported.

Source:
Reuters,"Flash floods inundate central Europe", accessed August 8, 2010

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