Gulf Today

Germany defends preparatio­n for floods

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BERLIN: German officials are defending their preparatio­ns for flooding in the face of the raging torrents that caught many people by surprise and let over 180 people dead in Western Europe, but they concede that they will need to learn lessons from the disaster.

Efforts to find any more victims and clean up the mess let behind by the floods across a swath of western Germany, eastern Belgium and the Netherland­s continued on Monday as floodwater­s receded.

The downpours that led to usually small rivers swelling at vast speed in the middle of last week had been forecast, but warnings of potentiall­y catastroph­ic damage didn’t appear to have found their way to many people on the ground - oten in the middle of the night.

“As soon as we have provided the immediate aid that stands at the forefront now, we will have to look at whether there were things that didn’t go well, whether there were things that went wrong, and then they have to be corrected,” Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told the Bild newspaper.

“That isn’t about finger-pointing - it’s about improvemen­ts for the future.”

The head of Germany’s civil protection agency said that the country’s weather service had “forecast relatively well” and that the country was well-prepared for flooding on its major rivers.

But, Armin Schuster told ZDF television late on Sunday, “half an hour before, it is oten not possible to say what place will be hit with what quantity” of water. He said that his agency had sent 150 warning notices out via apps and media.

He said he couldn’t yet say where sirens sounded and where they didn’t - “we will have to investigat­e that.”

Officials in the worst-affected German state, Rhineland-palatinate, said they were well-prepared for flooding and municipali­ties had been alerted and acted.

But the state’s interior minister, Roger Lewentz, said ater visiting the hard-hit village of Schuld with Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday that “we of course had the problem that the technical infrastruc­ture - electricit­y and so on - was destroyed in one go.” Local authoritie­s “tried very quickly to react,” he said.

“But this was an explosion of the water in moments.... You can have the very best preparatio­ns and warning situations (but) if warning equipment is destroyed and carried away with buildings, then that is a very difficult situation.”

 ?? Reuters ?? ↑ A man looks outside a house in an area, affected by floods, in Bad Muensterei­fel on Monday.
Reuters ↑ A man looks outside a house in an area, affected by floods, in Bad Muensterei­fel on Monday.

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