Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Flooding devastates Germany

Dozens dead, at least 1,300 missing after storms overflow rivers in W. Europe

- By Melissa Eddy

BERLIN — Following a day of frantic rescue efforts and orders to evacuate towns rapidly filling with water unloosed by violent storms, the German authoritie­s said late Thursday that after confirming dozens of deaths, they were unable to account for at least 1,300 other people.

That staggering figure was announced after swift-moving water from swollen rivers surged through cities and villages in two western German states, where the hardest-hit regions said that 58 people were known to have died and other fatalities were expected.

With communicat­ion badly hampered, the authoritie­s were hoping that the missing people are safe, if unreachabl­e. But the storms and the floods have already proved deadly.

At least 11 more people were reported to have died in Belgium, according to authoritie­s who also ordered inhabitant­s of downtown Liège to evacuate as the Meuse River, which flows through its center, overflowed its banks.

The storms and resulting high water also battered neighborin­g Switzerlan­d, the Netherland­s and Luxembourg as a slow-moving weather system threatened to dump even more rain on the inundated region overnight and into early Friday.

The immediate focus on Thursday was the rescue efforts, with hundreds of firefighte­rs, emergency responders and soldiers working to save people from the upper floors and rooftops of their homes, fill sandbags to stem the rising water and carry out searches for the missing.

One of the most heavily hit regions was the Ahrweiler district, where flash floods surged through the village of Schuld, washing away six houses and leaving several more on the verge of collapse.

With so many unaccounte­d for, the district authority said late Thursday the number of dead was expected to climb. “Given the

complexity of the level of damage, it is not possible at this time to make a final assessment of the situation,” it said in a statement.

“We have no exact numbers of dead, but can say that we have many people who have become victims of this flood,” Armin Laschet, the governor of North Rhine-Westphalia, one of the hardest- hit states in Germany, told reporters on Thursday.

“Many people lost everything that they own after the mud flowed into their homes,” said Mr. Laschet, who is running to replace Angela Merkel as chancellor in national elections on Sept. 26.

The flooding in North Rhine- Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate was some of the worst in decades, after several days of steady rain dumped more water than could be absorbed by the ground and sewage systems.

The police in Koblenz said 18 people had died in the heavily hit Ahrweiler district, where the Ahr river burst its banks, inundating the town of Schuld with murky pale brown water. Six houses collapsed, and several others threatened to give way, the police said.

The police urged people to upload images taken of the floods to help them in their search.

The authoritie­s in the district of Euskirchen, south of Düsseldorf, said that at least 15 people were known to have died in the flooding. Many others were still being rescued, although some villages remained unreachabl­e. Police in North RhineWestp­halia reported at least seven other fatalities.

Ms. Merkel, who is visiting Washington, expressed her condolence­s to those who had lost loved ones and thanked the thousands of helpers. She pledged the support of the German government.

“Everything that can be done, wherever we can help, we will do that,” she said, adding that Germany had received offers of help from its European partners.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs worked through the night to evacuate people who had been left stranded. Two died while trying to rescue people in Altena, in North RhineWestp­halia, the police said.

“The water is still flowing knee- high through the streets, parked cars are thrown sideways, and trash and debris are piling up on the sides,” Alexander Bange, the district spokesman in the Märkische region of North Rhine-Westphalia, told the German news agency DPA.

Dozens of communitie­s were left without power, while some villages were cut off entirely, the police said. Telephone and cellphone networks were also down, making it difficult to establish who was missing.

Belgium and the Netherland­s also experience­d significan­t flooding as the weather system made its way across the region. In Belgium, the flooding was reported to have caused the deaths of at least two people in Liège province, according to the country’s public broadcaste­r, RTBF.

As the Meuse river continued to rise to dangerous levels, the regional authoritie­s urged people in the city to evacuate, and if that was not possible, to shelter in the upper floors of buildings. All stores were ordered shut, and tourists were advised to leave.

The Belgian Defense Force said it had deployed helicopter­s and personnel to assist with rescue and recovery efforts amid reports that the river was expected to rise several feet, threatenin­g a dam.

In the Netherland­s, soldiers were sent to help with evacuation­s in Limburg province, where at least one nursing home had to be cleared, according to the Dutch news outlet NU.nl.

Intense rain in Switzerlan­d led the country’s weather service to warn on Thursday that flooding would worsen in the coming days. It said there was a high risk of flooding on Lake Biel, Lake Thun and Lake Lucerne, and noted the potential for landslides.

 ?? Ed Yozwick/Post-Gazette Source: Esri, Associated Press ??
Ed Yozwick/Post-Gazette Source: Esri, Associated Press
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 ?? Sebastian Schmitt/dpa via AP ?? A regional train sits in high water Thursday at the local station in Kordel, Germany, after it was flooded by the Kyll river.
Sebastian Schmitt/dpa via AP A regional train sits in high water Thursday at the local station in Kordel, Germany, after it was flooded by the Kyll river.
 ?? Valentin Bianchi/Associated Press ?? A car floats in the Meuse River during heavy flooding Thursday in Liege, Belgium. Heavy rainfall is causing flooding in several provinces in Belgium, with rain expected to last until Friday.
Valentin Bianchi/Associated Press A car floats in the Meuse River during heavy flooding Thursday in Liege, Belgium. Heavy rainfall is causing flooding in several provinces in Belgium, with rain expected to last until Friday.

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