Jamaica Gleaner

Angela Merkel tours flood ravaged areas, vows climate action

-

GERMAN CHANCELLOR Angela Merkel surveyed what she called a “surreal, ghostly” scene in a devastated village on Sunday, pledging quick financial aid and a redoubled political focus on curbing climate change as the death toll from floods in western Europe climbed above 180.

Merkel toured Schuld, a village on a tight curve of the Ahr River in western Germany where many buildings were damaged or destroyed by rapidly rising floodwater­s Wednesday night.

Although the mayor of Schuld said no one was killed or injured there, many other places weren’t so lucky. The death toll in the Ahrweiler area, where Schuld is located, stood at 112. Authoritie­s said some people are still missing and they fear the toll may still rise.

In neighbouri­ng north Rhine-Westphalia state, Germany’s most populous, 46 people were killed, including four firefighte­rs. Belgium confirmed 27 deaths.

Merkel said she came away from Schuld, still partly strewn with rubble and mud in bright sunshine, with “a real picture of, I must say, the surreal, ghostly situation.”

“It is shocking – I would almost say that the German language barely has words for the devastatio­n that has been wreaked,” she said at a news conference in a nearby town.

STEP BY STEP

Merkel said authoritie­s will work to “set the world right again in this beautiful region, step by step,” and her Cabinet will approve an immediate and medium-term financial aid program on Wednesday.

Finance Minister Olaf Scholz told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper that more than €300 million ($354 million) will be needed. And he said officials must set up a longerterm rebuilding programme which, from experience with previous flooding, will be in the billions of Euros.

“Thankfully, Germany is a country that can manage this financiall­y,” said Merkel, who is stepping down as chancellor following an election in September. “Germany is a strong country and we will stand up to this force of nature in the short term – but also in the medium and long term, through policy that pays more regard to nature and the climate than we did in recent years. That will be necessary too.”

Climate scientists say the link between extreme weather and global warming is unmistakab­le and the urgency to do something about climate change undeniable.

Scientists can’t yet say for sure whether climate change caused the flooding, but they insist that it certainly exacerbate­s the extreme weather disasters on display around the world.

 ?? AP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel, rear second left, folds her hands as she and the Governor of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Malu Dreyer, rear third right, are seen on a bridge in Schuld, western Germany, Sunday, July 18 during their visit in the flood-ravaged areas to survey the damage and meet survivors.
AP German Chancellor Angela Merkel, rear second left, folds her hands as she and the Governor of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Malu Dreyer, rear third right, are seen on a bridge in Schuld, western Germany, Sunday, July 18 during their visit in the flood-ravaged areas to survey the damage and meet survivors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica