Business Day

Melting snow continues to cause havoc

- Tamara Vaal

Swathes of northern Kazakhstan and Russia’s Urals region were flooded on Monday as melt waters swelled the tributarie­s of the world’s seventh-longest river system, forcing more than 125,000 people to flee their homes.

Russia’s southern Ural region and northern Kazakhstan have been grappling with the worst flooding in living memory after very large snow falls melted swiftly amid heavy rain over land already waterlogge­d before winter.

That has swelled the tributarie­s of the Ob beyond bursting point, leaving some cities in Russia and Kazakhstan under water. The Ob rises in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia and empties into the Arctic Ocean.

WATER SUPPLY

Several districts of the northern Kazakh city of Petropavlo­vsk were completely flooded, said a Reuters journalist. The city sits on the Ishim River, a tributary of the Irtysh, the chief tributary of the Ob.

Almost 1,000 houses have been flooded in the north Kazakhstan region of which Petropavlo­vsk is the centre, and more than 5,000 people have been evacuated, officials said. There have been interrupti­ons in power and water supply in the city, and the main reservoir supplying the city with drinkable water has been flooded.

People were queuing up in front of water trucks moving from one neighbourh­ood to another in the city.

Just a few hundred kilometres over the border into Russia, Kurgan, a region of 800,000 people at the confluence of the Ural mountains and Siberia, was grappling with flooding and rising water levels in the Tobol River, another tributary of the Irtysh.

Water levels rose to 6.31m in the main city, Kurgan. Governor Vadim Shumkov said there was almost a “sea” of water approachin­g.

“The city of Kurgan itself will be next,” Shumkov said.

“The flow of the Tobol is accelerati­ng. The water level in it is constantly rising.

“Fellow countrymen, leave the flooded areas immediatel­y.”

Shumkov warned that flooding would begin shortly on the right bank of the Tobol, which slices the region south to north, and the low part of its left bank.

Floods were also inundating homes in the Tomsk region in the southweste­rn part of Siberia, officials said on Telegram.

EVACUATION

Almost 140 houses near the city of Tomsk, which is the regional administra­tive centre, were under water on Monday and 84 people were evacuated.

The Ob-Irtysh river system is the world’s seventh largest, after the Yellow River, the Yenisei, the Mississipp­i, the Yangtze, the Amazon and the Nile.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Rising danger:
Rescuers on a dinghy in a flooded street in the Russian city of Orsk after the Ural River burst through dam embankment­s last week.
/Reuters Rising danger: Rescuers on a dinghy in a flooded street in the Russian city of Orsk after the Ural River burst through dam embankment­s last week.

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