The Borneo Post

Paris museums close doors as Seine nears 30-year high

- June 5, 2016

PARIS: Paris’ Louvre and Orsay museums shut their doors in a race to move art treasures from their basements, as the River Seine yesterday neared its highest level in more than three decades.

At least 17 people have been killed in floods that have wrought havoc in parts of Europe after days of pounding rain, trapping people in their homes and forcing rescuers to row lifeboats down streets turned into rivers.

Parisians were urged to stay away from the Seine, which has spilled over its banks in places and at 3.00am yesterday was at 6.09 metres (just under 20 feet) above normal levels.

French President Francois Hollande made a late night visit to the Louvre, where dozens of volunteers worked through the night to save some of the 38,000 artworks thought to be at risk.

The Seine’s famous tree-lined riverside walkways, usually the evening haunt of strolling couples, were inundated with several feet of eddying water.

France’s environmen­t ministry said the river is expected to peak at between 6.10-6.40 metres during the night — potentiall­y higher than the floods of 1982. The record remains the 8.62 metres reached in 1910.

Paris firefighte­rs warned people to keep away from dangerous parts of the river, but crowds still gathered on the famous Pont du Carrousel bridge to watch the swirling waters.

“It is a reminder that nature is more powerful than man and we cannot do anything, only wait,” said Gabriel Riboulet, a 26-yearold entreprene­ur, as he pulled his bicycle over to take a picture.

A small number of basement flats in the capital began to flood on Friday and the environmen­t ministry warned some residents in areas of western Paris might have to be evacuated. A campsite in the Bois de Boulogne in the west of the capital was cleared.

Persistent­ly heavy rainfall across western and central Europe has swollen rivers and claimed victims from at least four countries.

Eleven people have been killed in the German states of Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttembe­rg, and two in Romania, while a beekeeper died in Belgium while trying to save his hives.

In France, a man on horseback drowned on Thursday after being swept away by a swollen river in Evry-Gregy-sur-Yerre, southeast of Paris.

At Montargis in the northcentr­al Loiret region, police also said they had found the body of a woman in her sixties who had apparently drowned.

French Environmen­t Minister Segolene Royal said she feared more bodies would be found as waters receded in villages in central France, some of which have suffered their worst floods in a century.

Meanwhile the environmen­t ministry said a “plateau” in flooding had probably been reached.

“This high level should likely remain relatively stable throughout the weekend before (the flooding) begins to recede,” it said.

In northeast France, some 100 people were evacuated because of violent storms.

Officials erected emergency flood barriers along the Seine in the capital, where several metro stations were closed and workers piled sandbags on platform entrances to stop the waters.

Boat traffic has been banned in the capital, and a regional train line that runs along the Seine has been suspended. — AFP

It is a reminder that nature is more powerful than man and we cannot do anything, only wait. — Gabriel Riboulet, entreprene­ur

 ??  ?? Tourists read informatio­n notices that indicate that the Louvre Museum is closed due to the rising Seine River in Paris, France, after days of almost non-stop rain caused flooding in the country. — Reuters photo
Tourists read informatio­n notices that indicate that the Louvre Museum is closed due to the rising Seine River in Paris, France, after days of almost non-stop rain caused flooding in the country. — Reuters photo

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