The Telegram (St. John's)

Death toll surpasses 110 as floodwater­s continue to rise

- MARTIN SCHLICHT DAVID SAHL

SCHULD, Germany - More than 1,000 people were missing in flood-stricken regions of western Germany and Belgium on Friday, where waters were still rising with the death toll already well over 100 and communicat­ions in some areas cut.

Entire communitie­s lay in ruins after swollen rivers swept through towns and villages in the western German states of North Rhine-westphalia and Rhineland-palatinate, Belgium as well as the Netherland­s.

“It was terrible not to able to help people,” Frank Thel, a resident of Schuld in Rhineland-palatinate, told Reuters in front of a pile of rubble. “They were waving at us from windows. Houses were collapsing to the left and right of them and in the house between they were waving.”

In Germany alone, 103 people have died in what is the country’s worst mass loss of life in years. Twelve of the dead were residents of a home for disabled people in Sinzig south of Cologne who were surprised by the flash floods during the night.

The death toll is expected to rise further as more houses collapsed, while in Belgium, media said at least 14 had died.

Some 114,000 households in Germany were without power on Friday and mobile phone networks had collapsed in some flooded regions, which meant that family and friends were unable to track down their loved ones.

CONCERN OVER DAMS

In Rhineland-palatinate, around 1,300 people were reported missing in the Ahrweiler district south of Cologne, the district government said on Facebook.

Further north, in Erftstadt, several houses collapsed on Friday morning, and authoritie­s feared casualties.

Roads around the town were impassable after being washed away by the floods. Rescue crews tried to reach residents by boat and had to communicat­e via walkietalk­ie.

“The network has completely collapsed. The infrastruc­ture has collapsed. Hospitals can’t take anyone in. Nursing homes had to be evacuated,” a spokeswoma­n for the regional government of Cologne said.

The German military has deployed over 700 soldiers to support rescue efforts.

Authoritie­s worried that further dams could overflow, spilling uncontroll­ed floods into communitie­s below, and were trying to ease pressure by releasing more water from them.

Some 4,500 people were evacuated downstream from the Steinbacht­al dam in western Germany, which had been at risk of a breach overnight, and a stretch of motorway was closed.

The devastatio­n of the floods, attributed by meteorolog­ists to a climate-change driven shift in the jet stream that has brought in land water that once stayed at sea, could shake up an election that has until now seen little discussion of climate.

Proposals by the Greens, running a distant second in polls to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves, to introduce motorway speed limits to cut carbon emissions had drawn outrage. But this dramatic illustrati­on of the raw power of nature slighted could refocus campaignin­g ahead of the September vote.

One of the candidates to succeed Merkel, her party’s Armin Laschet, was at centre stage as premier of North Rhine-westphalia, where 23 towns and rural districts took extensive damage.

“It is a sad certainty that such extreme events will determine our day-to-day life more and more frequently in the future,” Laschet said, adding that more measures were needed to fight global warming.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said the scale and intensity of the flooding was a clear indication of climate change and demonstrat­ed the urgent need to act, echoing an earlier message from Merkel herself.

REINFORCIN­G DIKES

Thousands of residents in the north of the Limburg province in neighbouri­ng Netherland­s were ordered to leave their homes early Friday as floodwater­s peaked.

Emergency services were on high alert, and authoritie­s were also reinforcin­g dikes along vulnerable stretches where floodwater­s continue to rise.

Waters were receding in the southern city of Maastricht, where there was no flooding and in the town of Valkenburg, where damage was widespread, but no one was hurt.

In Belgium, at least four people were missing. The Belgium crisis centre has urged people in large parts of the south and east of the country not to travel.

France sent 40 military and a helicopter to Liege in Belgium to help with the flood situation, Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Twitter.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An aerial view after flooding at Erftstadt-blessem, Germany.
REUTERS An aerial view after flooding at Erftstadt-blessem, Germany.

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