The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Fresh flooding hits Venice

Historic city again engulfed by rising water

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Waters have been rising again in Venice, just three days after the Italian lagoon city experience­d its worst flooding in more than 50 years.

Mayor Luigi Brugnaro said he was forced to ask police to block off the famous St Mark’s Square, which was already covered in knee-high water yesterday morning.

Workers in thigh-high boots began removing the platforms that had been used by the public to cross the square without getting wet.

The famed city saw the second-worst flooding on record on Tuesday when the water level reached more than six feet above sea level, which prompted the Italian government to declare a state of emergency.

On Thursday, the government also approved 20 million euros in funding to help Venice repair some of the most urgent damage.

Venice’s mayor said the damage is estimated at hundreds of millions of euros and blamed climate change for the “dramatic situation” in the historic city.

He called for the speedy completion of the city’s long-delayed Moses flood defence project.

Tuesday’s devastatin­g floods have reignited the long-running debate about Moses, a multibilli­on-euro flood defence project that has been under constructi­on since 2003.

The project has not yet been activated, after being delayed a number of times due to corruption scandals, cost overruns and environmen­talist opposition over its impact on Venice’s lagoon ecosystem.

 ??  ?? DELUGE: People use trestle bridges to walk across a flooded St Mark’s Square in the heart of historic Venice
DELUGE: People use trestle bridges to walk across a flooded St Mark’s Square in the heart of historic Venice
 ??  ?? Municipal workers wade past St Mark’s Basilica
Municipal workers wade past St Mark’s Basilica
 ??  ?? Former deputy PM Matteo Salvini, centre, in the square
Former deputy PM Matteo Salvini, centre, in the square

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