Los Angeles Times

Italy seeks to aid victims as flood toll rises

Northern towns and villages remain cut off after intense rain that has claimed 13 lives.

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FAENZA, Italy — Rescue crews worked Thursday to reach towns and villages in northern Italy still isolated by heavy rains and flooding, as the death toll rose to 13 and authoritie­s began mapping out cleanup and reconstruc­tion plans.

The extreme weather behind this week’s disaster — a prolonged drought punctuated by 36 hours of intense rainfall, two weeks after another downpour — led to two dozen rivers and tributarie­s bursting their banks. The force of water sent torrents of mud tearing through entire towns in Emilia-Romagna, flooding storefront­s and basements.

Local mayors warned that some remote villages were still completely cut off because landslides had made roads impassable and phone service remained severed. That has prevented rescue teams from reaching residents and authoritie­s from understand­ing the full scope of their needs, said Mercato Saraceno Mayor Monica Rossi.

“If it rains any more, the situation will be tragic,” Rossi warned on the news channel Sky TG24, standing on a road with a chunk missing from a landslide.

The death toll rose to 13 after more bodies were discovered Thursday in the hard-hit province of Ravenna, state-run RAI television reported, citing the Ravenna prefecture. Among them: a couple in their 70s found dead in their flooded apartment in Russi after their son sounded the alarm that he had lost contact with them.

Some parts of the city of Faenza remained underwater Thursday morning, with cars submerged and basements swamped by thick, gooey mud. One family standing on their balcony said they didn’t have electricit­y, gas or food. Other residents took shelter at a local gymnasium, where soldiers set up cots on the basketball court for new arrivals.

“At some point they told us all to leave the area, and about one hour later we heard a loud boom,” 29-yearold Faenza resident Claudia said Thursday, recalling the moment early Wednesday that the nearby Lamone river burst its banks. “The water just flooded all over.”

More than 10,000 people fled their homes, some plucked from rooftops or balconies by rescue helicopter­s and others ferried out on dinghies. One family with a 20-day-old baby was rescued Thursday morning, said Cesena Mayor Enzo Lattuca. Another packed their belongings into an inflatable pool, which they floated down the thigh-high river of mud that was previously a street.

But residents in other towns, such as Castel Bolognese, started cleaning up as the waters receded, with residents shoveling out mud-filled basements and storefront­s.

The drought-parched region had already estimated about $1.1 billion in losses from heavy rains this month, but the regional president, Stefano Bonaccini, said the losses were now in the multiple billions given the widespread damage to farmland, storefront­s and infrastruc­ture.

Bonaccini has called for the national government to declare a state of emergency.

“It will take gigantic work” to recover, he said.

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