The Herald (South Africa)

Record flood waters force evacuation­s in Russia’s Urals

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Flood waters were rising in two cities in Russia’s Ural Mountains at the weekend after Europe’s third-longest river burst through a dam, flooding at least 10,000 homes and forcing thousands of people to flee with just their pets and a few belongings.

Some of the worst floods in decades have hit a string of Russian regions in the Ural Mountains and Siberia, alongside parts of neighbouri­ng Kazakhstan, in recent days.

The Ural River, which rises in the Ural Mountains and flows into the Caspian Sea, swelled several metres in just hours on Friday due to melt water, bursting through a dam embankment in the city of

Orsk, 1,800km east of Moscow.

Orsk mayor Vasily Kozupitsa was quoted by Russian news agencies as saying a second river in the town, the Yelshanka, had also burst its banks.

Measures were being undertaken to evacuate residents from affected areas.

More than 6,100 people have already been evacuated from the city of 230,000, according to local authoritie­s.

Fifteen of 40 schools in the school had been flooded.

Footage published by the Emergencie­s Ministry showed people making their way through neck-high waters, rescuing stranded dogs and travelling along flooded roads in boats and canoes.

State news agency Tass reported that six adults and three children had been hospitalis­ed in Orsk, but their condition was not life-threatenin­g.

Agencies quoted authoritie­s as saying the Samara River in the town of Buzuluk, further west in Orenburg region, was also rising quickly.

Measures were taken to keep residents safe.

President Vladimir Putin ordered emergencie­s minister Alexander Kurenkov to fly to the region.

The Kremlin said on Sunday that flooding was now also inevitable in the Urals region of Kurgan and the Siberian region of Tyumen.

In Kurgan city, which has a population of 310,000, authoritie­s ordered residents of one riverside neighbourh­ood to evacuate urgently, saying that flood waters would soon arrive in the city.

The Orenburg region’s governor, Denis Pasler, said the floods were the worst to hit the region since records began.

He said flooding had been recorded along the entire course of the 2,400km Ural River, which flows through Orenburg region and then Kazakhstan into the Caspian Sea.

Russian media cited Orenburg region authoritie­s as estimating the cost of flood damage locally as about 21bn roubles (R4.2bn) and saying that flood waters would dissipate only after April 20.

In Kazakhstan, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said the floods were his country’s largest natural disaster in scale and impact for 80 years.

North Korea leader Kim Jong-un expressed sympathy to Putin about the flood, state media KCNA said, underscori­ng stronger ties between Moscow and Pyongyang after the leaders met last year.

“Our people will always be with the Russian people,” Kim said.

Flood warnings were issued in other Russian regions and Kurenkov said the situation could get worse very fast.

“The water is coming, and in the coming days its level will only rise,” Sergei Salmin, the mayor of Orenburg, a city of at least 550,000 people, said.

“The flood situation remains critical.”

Emergencie­s minister Kurenkov said bottled water and mobile treatment plants were needed, while health officials said vaccinatio­ns against Hepatitis A were being conducted in flooded areas.

Local officials said the dam in Orsk was built for a water level of 5.5m yet the Ural River rose to 9.6m.

Federal investigat­ors opened a criminal case over violations in the constructi­on of the 2010 dam, which prosecutor­s said had not been maintained properly.

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