At least seven people have died after some of the
heaviest rain in years hit central and Eastern Europe, causing flooding and
widespread disruption.
A slow-moving low pressure system dubbed Storm Boris
dumped a month’s worth of rain onto several of Europe’s
historic capitals, including Vienna, Bratislava and Prague. The heavy rainfall continued to pummel the
region into Sunday 15 Sep.
In Poland, one person drowned in Klodzko county and
authorities advised residents of Moszczanka and Laka Prudnicka to evacuate
after a dam at risk of collapse breached on Sunday. In Austria, a firefighter
died in action on Sunday, the fire department told CNN. In Romania, a fifth
person was also confirmed to have died from flooding on Sunday, CNN affiliate
Antena 3 reported.
Rescuers have been
working hard to rescue hundreds of people left stranded by heavy rainfall
there. “The effects were
most critical in seven localities,” Romania’s Interior Minister Cătălin Predoiu
told Antena 3. Although teams managed to save 95 people trapped in their homes,
the bodies of the dead were found in either their houses or yards, Predoiu
added.
Around 5,400
houses have been damaged in the southeastern region of Galati which has been
hardest hit by the flooding, Antena 3 reported.
Rescue services have been
launched in hard-hit counties as authorities warn that they have recorded the
heaviest rainfall in 100 years over the past 24 hours. Rivers
have burst their banks in Poland and the Czech Republic. In southwest Poland,
1,600 people were evacuated in Klodzko county as local rivers reached record
high water levels and broke their banks. Klodzko, a town of 25,000, was left
partially submerged in water on Sunday.
Since the beginning of the
extreme rains, more than 10,500 people have been evacuated in the Czech
Republic, General Director of the Fire Rescue Service Vladimír Vlček told CNN
Prima News
“Water is flowing over the
whole of Krnov. We estimate that 70-80%
of the town is under water. The water is almost at the town hall. The
square is two-thirds flooded,” the town’s deputy mayor, Miroslav Binar said,