The Borneo Post

Seven dead in Spain as winter storms lash coast

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BARCELONA: The death toll from a storm that has lashed Spain with strong winds and heavy snow has risen to seven, while four people were missing, officials said.

Gale-force winds and huge waves have smashed into seafront towns, damaging many shops and restaurant­s, wrecking beach facilities and flooding some streets in the east of the country since Sunday.

The latest victim was a man who fell into the sea in the northeaste­rn port of Palamos, emergency services said late Wednesday.

Police found a body on Wednesday in a flooded area in the eastern region of Valencia where they were looking for a 67-year-old man who went missing in his car, a local police spokesman said.

Two other deaths were recorded in the southern region of Andalusia – among them a 77-year-old farmer killed after a greenhouse collapsed on him in a hailstorm, police said.

Four people were still believed to be missing after Storm Gloria crashed into eastern Spain on Sunday with gusts of over 100 kilometres per hour, massive waves, snow and freezing rain.

National weather agency Aemet said the storm was starting to abate on Wednesday although it kept the northeaste­rn region of Catalonia and the Balearic Islands on alert.

In the south of France, 1,500 people were evacuated as two rivers quickly overflowed overnight on Wednesday.

Meteorolog­ists said the rains would continue throughout Thursday, varying in intensity, in France’s southernmo­st Mediterran­ean department­s of the Pyrenees-Orientales and Aude.

While winter storms are not rare on Spain’s Mediterran­ean coast, Spain has suffered several episodes of unusually intense rainfall in recent years.

Seven people died in September 2019 in flash floods in southeaste­rn Spain and in October 2018, 13 people died on Mallorca as intense rain caused rivers to overflow with raging waters that tore through streets and swept away cars.

A study published in October by the Mediterran­ean Experts on Climate and Environmen­tal Change, which groups more than 600 scientists, said episodes of heavy rain could increase in the region by 10-20 per cent because of climate change. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Flooded train tracks are pictured in Malgrat de Mar, near Girona, as storm Gloria batters Spanish eastern coast.
— AFP photo Flooded train tracks are pictured in Malgrat de Mar, near Girona, as storm Gloria batters Spanish eastern coast.

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