Central, eastern Europe prepare for worst flooding in decades

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Much of central and eastern Europe is on high alert as torrential rain falls across large parts of the region for a third day, threatening the worst flooding in decades.

Four deaths were reported in Romania during flash floods, with additional people not accounted for. More than 200 firefighters were on hand to help with evacuations.

Some 5,000 households have been affected by flooding across seven counties, with 160 people evacuated and about 100 rescued, said Romanian Interior Minister Catalin Predoiu. Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu is headed to the hardest hit areas and is expected to give an update on conditions.

In some villages, residents climbed onto rooftops to avoid rising waters.

Heavy rain is falling in Austria and southern Germany, with snowfall at higher elevations in the Alps and unusually low temperatures – just a week after the region was sweltering with a much hotter than normal early September.

St Pölten, the capital of Lower Austria province, is forecast to get 30 centimeters of rain from the weather system, more than four times its monthly average for September. The town of Neunkirchen, south of the capital Vienna, will see an estimated 40cms.

Mountainous areas of Austria face 100cms to 150cms of snow, with the snow line initially as low as 800 meters above sea level, according to the Austrian forecasting service GeoSphere.

Railroad traffic has been halted on multiple lines due to snow and landslides, snarling freight movement.

Vienna was whipped on Saturday by winds gusting to 65 kilometers per hour along with heavy rains, and city authorities advised against unnecessary journeys.

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer and Socialist candidate Andreas Babler cancelled campaign events ahead of the nation’s elections on 29 September.

Authorities have declared a state of emergency in some municipalities north of the Danube, where the Kamp River is forecast to reach century-high water levels. The Danube itself is expected to reach its highest in 20 to 30 years.

In Poland, Prime Minister Donald Tusk met with first responders on Friday in the southwestern city of Wroclaw. “There is no reason to panic, but there is a reason to be fully mobilized,” he said. By Saturday morning, at least a few hundred people had been evacuated in southwest Poland in advance of rising rivers.

The Czech Republic has mobilized about 100,000 firefighters to help erect anti-flood barriers in the most affected parts of the country.

Parts of villages in the northern region, near the border with Poland and Germany, have been cut off by rising rivers but authorities haven’t reported large-scale evacuations so far. About 60,000 households have lost electricity and dozens of trains have been cancelled, mainly due to fallen trees, the CTK newswire reported.

Source link : https://www.luxtimes.lu/europeanunion/central-eastern-europe-prepare-for-worst-flooding-in-decades/20016626.html

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Publish date : 2024-09-14 07:00:00

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