Yorkshire Post

Death toll from flash floods in Athens rises to 16

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THE DEATH toll from flash floods that swept through Greece’s capital Athens has risen to 16.

More bodies were found as rescue crews searching for missing people recovered another body.

They made the discovery in the swamped basement of a home in the Nea Peramos district west of Athens.

Residents on the western fringes of the city were still struggling to clean up the devastatio­n from the floods.

Search-and-rescue operations were continuing yesterday for four more people reported missing since the floods turned roads into violent torrents of mud and debris. The disaster was among the worst to hit the Greek capital in decades and the government declared a day of national mourning.

Flags across the country flew at half-mast yesterday, including at the ancient Acropolis landmark in Athens.

The hardest-hit area was Mandra, a working-class district on the western outskirts of the capital. Authoritie­s said about 500 homes and businesses were damaged.

The floods, which came after a severe overnight storm, carried away vehicles, collapsed walls, sank fishing boats and submerged a section of a major motorway.

Twelve of the 23 people injured remain hospitalis­ed, including an 82-year-old woman listed as being in serious condition, the National Health Operations Centre said.

Cars lay piled on top of each other or flung against buildings after being carried away by the torrents sweeping through the area’s streets.

Some houses and businesses saw outer walls collapse, leaving the interior exposed to the elements.

More storms lashed the Greek capital yesterday, temporaril­y severing traffic on one of Athens’ main central avenues, although they did not cause flash floods.

Local municipali­ties were providing hotel rooms for those left homeless while the Merchant Marine Ministry said it was making arrangemen­ts for a cruise ship to dock on the coast near the affected area to provide temporary accommodat­ion.

It also said arrangemen­ts were being made with the army and navy to provide water tankers to transport clean water to residents.

Nearly all the injuries and fatalities occurred in Mandra and the surroundin­g area. Twelve of the dead were found there while the bodies of two men were picked up by the coastguard after having been swept out to sea by the flood.

The victims ranged in ages from mid-30s to 80s and included a truck driver swept away by floodwater, a hunter and several people who drowned in their flooded homes.

Most of those who died had drowned, a coroner at the hospital told local reporters, while some appeared to have died from injuries sustained from debris being carried by the floodwater.

The fire department said it had received 660 calls for help to pump water from flooded homes and businesses since Wednesday morning while it had rescued 88 people trapped in houses and vehicles.

All fire services in the wider Athens area remained on alert as more bad weather was forecast for the area.

 ??  ?? A man walks past cars moved by the force of flood water, and a damaged house, in the town of Mandra in western Athens, yesterday.
A man walks past cars moved by the force of flood water, and a damaged house, in the town of Mandra in western Athens, yesterday.

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