Central Europe floods, ten dead, thousands evacuated

In Europe, Floods & Storms, News Headlines

WARSAW (AFP) – Floods caused by torrential rain left 10 people dead and several others missing in central Europe Sunday, with residents rescued from rising waters in boats, buses and helicopters.

While rivers burst their banks and dykes were breached in Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic, in western Europe about 500 firefighters tackled wildfires in Portugal.

Three people drowned in southwestern Poland, near the country’s borders with Germany and the Czech Republic, Polish Interior Minister Jerzy Miller told reporters Sunday.

A woman drowned in the town of Bogatynia, which was heavily damaged by a river that burst its banks on Saturday, forcing 700 people to leave their homes, Polish firefighters’ spokesman Pawel Fratczak told AFP.

Another woman drowned in the same region, where a 55-year-old fireman was also swept away when a dyke burst, he added.

Water from the breached dyke partly flooded Zgorzelec-Goerlitz on the German-Polish border.

“The flood wave hit the town in a few hours. We couldn’t do anything to get ready for that,” Goerlitz mayor Michael Wieler told Germany’s N24 TV channel Sunday. The river rose by seven metres (23 feet), he said.

German police said nearly 1,500 people including the residents of two homes for elderly people had been evacuated in the same region in boats, buses and helicopters.

In Neukirchen near Chemnitz in southeastern Germany, three people were found drowned in a cellar on Saturday.

In the northern Czech Republic, three people drowned on Saturday and one “died of stress when cleaning his flooded house,” local ambulance spokeswoman Lenka Moravcova told AFP on Sunday.

Czech authorities also said at least three people were missing with next to no chance of being found.

In Liberec, around 100 kilometres (60 miles) north of Prague, thousands were forced to leave their homes due to rising waters.

Whole streets and squares disappeared under muddy waters in the region, where some 200 people were evacuated by helicopters as several dams and dykes threatened to burst.

In other parts of the country, rescuers evacuated children from several summer camps.

A 16-year-old girl went missing as a raft with six people capsized on a rain-swollen river in western Czech Republic on Sunday.

But the rain stopped on Sunday and weather forecasts for the region were optimistic.

In May and June this year, heavy flooding killed 22 people in Poland and six in the Czech Republic.

In Portugal nearly 500 firefighters tackled wildfires in the north and centre of the country, with rescue services saying the situation was improving due to changing weather confitions.

The number of major fires had dropped from 20 on Saturday to eight on Sunday, the civil protection agency said.

The biggest blaze was near the town of Sao Pedro do Sul, in the Viseu area, where more than 200 firefighters, 60 vehicles and three helicopters were deployed.

On Saturday three people including two firefighters suffered light injuries from the fires and a dozen were evacuated from their homes, authorities said.

The situation was improving due to changing weather Sunday, with cooler temperatures, cloud and the possibility of rain.

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