More than 20 die in floods in western Europe, dozens missing
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[July 15, 2021]
By Wolfgang Rattay and Riham Alkousaa
SCHULD, Germany (Reuters) -At least 19
people have died in Germany and dozens were missing on Thursday as
record rainfall in western Europe caused rivers to burst their banks,
swept away homes and inundated cellars.
Eight people died in the Euskirchen region south of the city of Bonn,
the authorities said. In Belgium, two men died due to the torrential
rain and a 15-year-old girl was missing after being swept away by a
swollen river.
Four people died and 70 were missing around the wine-growing hub of
Ahrweiler, in Rhineland-Palatinate state, police said, after the Ahr
river that flows into the Rhine burst its banks and brought down half a
dozen houses.
Hundreds of soldiers were helping police with the rescue efforts, using
tanks to clear roads of landslides and fallen trees, while helicopters
winched those stranded on rooftops to safety.
One local man fled Ahrweiler after a flood warning was issued at 2 a.m.
(0000 GMT).
"I've never experienced a catastrophe where the river burst its banks in
such a short space of time," the 63-year-old man, whose name was not
given, told SWR television.
In Belgium, around 10 houses collapsed in Pepinster after the river
Vesdre flooded the eastern town and residents were evacuated from more
than 1,000 homes.
The rain has also caused severe disruption to public transport, with
high-speed Thalys train services to Germany cancelled. Traffic on the
river Meuse is also suspended as the major Belgian waterway threatens to
breach its banks.
Downstream in the Netherlands, flooding rivers damaged many houses in
the southern province of Limburg, where several care homes were
evacuated.
In addition to the eight who died in the Euskirchen region, another
seven people died elsewhere in North Rhine-Westphalia, several of them
in flooded cellars, as well as two firefighters.
Video footage from nearby Bad Neuenahr showed cars and trucks strewn
across streets and one sport-utility vehicle perched on a fence, a road
blocked by wreckage and fallen trees as flood waters receded on Thursday
morning.
"IT'S A CATASTROPHE"
"It's a catastrophe! There are dead, missing and many people still in
danger. All of our emergency services are in action round the clock and
risking their own lives," said Malu Dreyer, premier of the
Rhineland-Palatinate.
"I extend my sympathies to the victims of this flood catastrophe."
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A woman wades across floodwater as she goes out shopping following
heavy rainfalls in Gross-Vernich, Germany, July 15, 2021.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
Further down the Rhine river, the heaviest rainfall
ever measured over 24 hours caused flooding in cities including
Cologne and Hagen, while in Leverkusen 400 people had to be
evacuated from a hospital.
In Wuppertal, known for its overhead railway, locals said their
cellars had been flooded and power cut off. "I can't even guess at
how much the damage will be," said Karl-Heinz Sammann, owner of the
Kitchen Club discotheque.
State premier Armin Laschet, the conservative candidate to succeed
Angela Merkel as chancellor at a general election in September,
visited Hagen on Thursday.
The Greens, running second in opinion polls ahead of Germany's
federal election in September, blamed the floods on global warming.
"This is already the impact of the climate catastrophe and this is
another wake-up call to make us realise: this is already here,"
Katrin Goering-Eckardt, the parliamentary leader of the Greens, told
RTL/NTV television.
Weather experts said that rains in the region over the past 24 hours
had been unprecedented, as a near-stationary low-pressure weather
system caused sustained local downpours also to the west in France,
Belgium and the Netherlands.
Rainwater draining into the Rhine, where shipping traffic was partly
suspended, was expected to test flood defences along the river,
including in Cologne, on the lower Rhine, and Koblenz, where the
Rhine and Moselle merge.
More heavy rain was due in southwestern Germany, on the upper
reaches of the German Rhine, later on Thursday and Friday, the
German Weather Service said.
(Additional reporting by Matthias Inverardi, Bart Meijer in
Amsterdam and Phil Blenkinsop in Brussels; Writing by Emma Thomasson
and Douglas Busvine; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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