Khaleej Times

Sirens saved hundreds of tourists from flash floods in Jordan’s Petra

-

petra — In ancient times, Arab tribesmen dug diversion tunnels to protect their low-lying trading post of Petra against desert flash floods. More than two millennia later, an alarm system warns visitors if flood water rushes towards what has become Jordan’s main tourist attraction.

Earlier this month, the alarms were activated for the first time, said Hussein Al Hasanat of the Petra Developmen­t & Tourism Region Authority. Sirens blared minutes before a torrent fed by heavy rains approached the Unesco World Heritage site carved into rose-hued rock face.

Hundreds of tourists were able to seek higher ground and were later evacuated, he said.

Amateur video posted online at the time showed visitors running through a steep, narrow canyon leading to the Treasury, Petra’s main draw, as guides urged them to hurry. Later, visitors were seen standing on a higher patch near the Treasury as knee-high water poured through the canyon.

Elsewhere in Jordan, such alarms are still missing. Thirty-four people were killed in flash floods in late September and early November.

The last fatal flash flood struck Petra in 1963 when 22 French tourists and a local guide were killed by rapidly rising waters. In response, Jordan’s Department of Antiquitie­s built a dam to keep water from entering the canyon leading to the Treasury.

In 2014, the alarm system was installed as added protection, with

sirens set to go off when flood water rises above four metres.

On November 9, the system was triggered for the first time, through a computer in the Petra Authority’s control room. The computer is connected to eight rain forecast systems and two water detection stations placed in the area, within 8

kilometres of Petra. The network generates instant data allowing officials to measure possible danger and warn people by the time the water reaches Petra.

Omar Dajani, a meteorolog­ist at the Arabia Weather company, said alarms should be installed in all vulnerable areas in Jordan. —

 ?? AP file ?? Tourists brave a rare rainstorm in plastic ponchos at the Treasury in Petra on February 13, 2017. —
AP file Tourists brave a rare rainstorm in plastic ponchos at the Treasury in Petra on February 13, 2017. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates