Flooding spreads in Russia, putting thousands more at risk
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[April 09, 2024]
ORSK, Russia (Reuters) -Flood sirens blared out in two
Russian cities on Tuesday, warning thousands more people to evacuate
immediately as two major rivers swelled to bursting point in some of the
worst flooding in at least 70 years.
Swiftly melting snow across swathes of the Ural Mountains and Siberia
has swelled some of the biggest rivers which surge across the wilds of
Russia, with at least 10,500 homes recorded as flooded so far and many
thousands more at risk.
The Ural River, Europe's third largest which flows into the Caspian,
burst through an embankment dam on Friday flooding the city of Orsk just
south of the Ural Mountains. Downstream, water levels in Orenburg, a
city of around 550,000, were rising.
Sirens in Kurgan, a city on the Tobol river, a tributary of the Irtysh,
warned people to evacuate immediately and Governor Vadim Shumkov urged
residents to take the warnings seriously.
"We understand you very well: It is hard to leave your possessions and
move somewhere at the call of the local authorities," Shumkov said,
adding that those demanding to stay in their houses were foolish.
"It's better that we laugh at the hydrologists together later and praise
God for the miracle of our common salvation. But let's do it alive."
The peak is expected in Orenburg on Wednesday.
President Vladimir Putin has been monitoring the floods from Moscow but
anger boiled over in Orsk when at least 100 Russians begged the Kremlin
chief to help and chanted "shame on you" at local officials who they
said had done too little.
With so much water flowing into rivers, emergencies were declared in
Orenburg, Kurgan and Tyumen, a major oil producing region of Western
Siberia - the largest hydrocarbon basin in the world.
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An aerial view shows flooded area in Orenburg, Russia, in this still
image taken from video released April 8, 2024. Mayor of Orenburg
City Sergei Salmin via Telegram/Handout via REUTERS
In Kurgan, a region with around 800,000 residents, drone footage
showed traditional Russian wooden houses and the golden kupolas of
Russian Orthodox Churches stranded among a vast expanse of water.
In Zverinogolovskoye, a town in Kurgan region, the water levels of
the Tobol rose 74 centimetres in just two hours. More than 19,000
people are risk in Kurgan, the TASS news agency reported.
The head of the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations, Alexander
Kurenkov, flew to Orenburg region on Tuesday to monitor the
situation after being tasked to do so by Putin, the ministry said.
Kurenkov will also visit the Kurgan and Tyumen regions in the Urals,
the ministry added.
"Preventive measures are already being taken there, rescue teams
have been strengthened, and the forces and means of the Russian
Ministry of Emergency Situations have been put on high alert," the
ministry said.
Rising water was also forecast in Siberia's Ishim river, a tributary
of the Irtysh river, which along with its parent, the Ob, forms the
world's seventh longest river system.
It was not immediately clear why this year's floods were so bad as
the snow melt is an annual event in Russia. Scientists say climate
change has made flooding more frequent worldwide.
(Writing by Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow and Lidia Kelly in Lisbon;
editing by Miral Fahmy and Philippa Fletcher)
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