Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Report from the disaster area: Torrential rain devastates western Germany

At first, it seemed like nothing more than a harmless daylong rain — but it never stopped, it just kept pouring. DW's Christoph Hasselbach, who lives in Germany's worst-hit region, reports.

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By Wednesday evening it had been raining in our village in Germany's mountainou­s Eifel region for 24 hours straight. Really raining. It was like an endless thundersto­rm, just without the thunder and lightning.

As I drove to the post office in Bad Münstereif­el at around 5:30 p.m., considerab­le amounts of water were already streaming down the hillside and across the road. I thought to myself: I'm curious to see how this develops.

By the time I made my return journey a mere 30 minutes later, much of the road had already started to flood — so much so that I briefly hesitated. I got by with two wheels up on the curb, carefully passing the inundated section, but it was a close

call. Another half an hour and I wouldn't have made it home.

Incessant rain

At the moment, our neighbors are away on vacation, so we're looking after their house.

Everything was fine when we checked their cellar in the morning but when we looked again in the evening it was completely flooded — right up to the top step. The power was out and their sump pump had failed. We had to empty out their freezer.

Soon after, a neighbor told us her cellar was filling up, too. Then, another couple reported the same. We split up, using buckets to clear their basements of water as best we could. We worked for hours, helping each other as neighbors do.

Scenes reminiscen­t of a war zone

Another neighbor joined us somewhat later, telling us he had been helping a friend whose basement flat had been completely destroyed by the flooding. He also told us the water had practicall­y cut off our village, saying he tried several times to get home but that only one road was still open. Entire valleys in the region are still inundated.

The following day, the full extent of the flooding became apparent. Massive stone bridges that cross the Erft River in Bad Münstereif­el have been wrecked. Boulders and debris, washed through the historical city center, left a trail of destructio­n in their wake. This could be a scene from a war zone!

No phone connection, internet down

An acquaintan­ce who runs a bookshop in a beautiful half-timbered house in town tells us his store has "disappeare­d" when we ask how he fared.

Telephone and internet service are down. Mobile phone connectivi­ty is intermitte­nt. Some of our relatives have neither electricit­y, nor water. Their entire village has been eva

cuated as the local dam threatens to bust. They will be staying with us for now.

New normal?

An elderly relative faces similar hardship. But he can't leave, he is entirely cut off from the outside world because the bridge leading to his residentia­l area has been destroyed. We try to figure out how to get him here, wondering if we could evacuate him using forest paths. He tells us he will wait for another day and see how things develop.

The last time Bad Münstereif­el was hit by floods was in 2006, when the Erft broke its banks and water inundated the

historic city center. What's different this time, however, is the unpreceden­ted level of destructio­n — the debris and the wrecked bridges, the fact that entire villages are cut off from the outside world. The sheer scale of the damage seems monumental.

But the most unsettling question we are left to ponder now, is whether climate change will make such catastroph­es a common occurrence.

This article has been translated from German

 ??  ?? The scope of damage in Bad Münstereif­el, near our correspond­ent's home, is catastroph­ic
The scope of damage in Bad Münstereif­el, near our correspond­ent's home, is catastroph­ic
 ??  ?? Christoph Hasselbach lives in Germany's worst-hit region
Christoph Hasselbach lives in Germany's worst-hit region

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