The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Germany vows to improve warning system as toll rises

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The German government on Monday pledged to improve the country’s under-fire warning systems as emergency services continued to search for victims of the worst flooding in living memory, with at least 165 people confirmed dead.

The west of the country was deluged over two days last week, sending torrents of water rushing down streets, sweeping away trees, cars and bridges and destroying swathes of housing.

Many victims in Germany were found dead in sodden cellars after attempting to retrieve valuables, while others were swept away by the sheer force of the water.

A total of 117 people are now confirmed to have died in Rhineland-Palatinate state, with 47 victims in neighbouri­ng North Rhine-Westphalia and one in Bavaria.

Government spokeswoma­n Martina Fietz said the national warning system and mobile phone app Nina had “worked” but admitted that “our experience­s with this disaster show that we need to do more and better”.

Armin Schuster, president of the government’s civil protection agency (BKK), called on German radio for sirens to be reinstated as part of the country’s disaster warnings system.

Although meteorolog­ical services had forecast torrential rain and flash floods, many residents said they were caught off-guard by rapidly rising waters.

The floods caused sweeping power cuts and knocked down telecommun­ication antennas, preventing residents from receiving warnings in time.

Under Germany’s federal system, it is up to the 16 regional states to organise responses to flood alerts and coordinate efforts with the civil protection office and the fire brigade.

Annalena Baerbock, the Green party candidate to replace Angela Merkel as chancellor after elections on Sept 26, on Monday called for a more centralise­d approach.

“In my view, the federal government must play a much stronger coordinati­ng role,” she told the ARD broadcaste­r.

But during a visit to the floodravag­ed town of Euskirchen in North Rhine-Westphalia, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said it would be “completely inconceiva­ble that such a disaster could be dealt with centrally from any one place”.

“I believe that we are still in the right position in Germany with our organisati­on of civil protection and disaster management,” he said.

Visiting the flood zone in Rhineland-Palatinate on Sunday, Merkel had said lessons should be learnt but cautioned against overly high expectatio­ns.

“Of course we ask ourselves what can be done better,” she said. “But in some situations, things happen so quickly that you can’t fully escape the force of nature.”

Merkel, who is retiring from politics after September’s elections, described the damage as ‘surreal’ and pledged quick aid to rebuild.

Emergency workers have been out in force to assess damaged buildings, clear debris and restore gas, electricit­y and telephone services. In the German town of Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, the search for bodies also continued on Monday amid mud-covered streets piled high with debris.

“They are still searching. We will find dead people for sure,” a resident of the town told AFP, while another said he had witnessed a body being carried away on a cart by the Bundeswehr.

Seehofer spoke of an “unbelievab­le tragedy” and said he had “never experience­d anything like it in my life”.

Now was “the time for help and solidarity”, he said.

“We have experience­d once again that in times like these, first and foremost, people stand firmly together.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Merkel (left) and Rhineland-Palatinate State Premier Malu Dreyer (right) stand on a bridge overlookin­g the floodravag­ed village of Schuld near Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Rhineland-Palatinate state, western Germany,
— AFP photo Merkel (left) and Rhineland-Palatinate State Premier Malu Dreyer (right) stand on a bridge overlookin­g the floodravag­ed village of Schuld near Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Rhineland-Palatinate state, western Germany,

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