November 22, 2024

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Germany, Belgium, Netherlands பொது Public mobilization after the deadly floods

Germany, Belgium, Netherlands பொது Public mobilization after the deadly floods

By SudOuest.fr with AFP

The last point of the authorities, this Saturday, is a rare scale of 153 deaths in this bad weather. An estimate is undoubtedly not final yet

Destroy disaster areas, restore power, and measure damage: A Titanic mission begins later Deadly floods in Western Europe, including Germany Looking for many who are missing. A total of 153 people died At least 133 in Germany and 20 in Belgium, according to a report released this Saturday, Luxembourg and the Netherlands have also seen sudden water levels rise over a part of their landmass.

Residents who took refuge on Wednesday evening when the floods began are gradually returning to their homes. Ruined views await in North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate, Affected areas of West Germany: Destroyed houses, uprooted trees, overturned cars, collapsed roads and bridges, cut-off networks. At least 133 people have died.

“The task is enormous”

“For 48 hours, it was a dream, we shoot here, but there is nothing we can do,” explains Cornelia Schloser, thinking of the tragic state of the family bakery in the village of Schultz, drowning in the waves. “In a few minutes, a wave was home,” said the fifty-year-old. In all affected areas, firefighters, civil defense, municipal officials, and soldiers – some behind the wheel of tanks – have begun the massive task of clearing and clearing piles of mud that often clog the streets.

“The work is enormous,” admitted the mayor of Solingen, a town south of the Ruhr area. The scale of the disaster is beginning to appear. We have to pump water, evaluate the structure of damaged buildings, demolish some of them, restore electricity, gas, telephones, build houses for people who have lost everything. The disruption of communication networks makes many inaccessible and complicates any amount of missing persons.

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INA FASSBENDER / AFP

“We have to assume that we will find other victims,” ​​predicted Caroline Waitsl, mayor of Erfstadt, not far from Cologne, where a large landslide washed away land and homes. President Frank-Walter Steinmeier plans to visit the devastated city on Saturday. The government has indicated it is working to set up a special aid fund when the damage is expected to reach billions of euros.

Climate change at the center of the debate

Solidarity has also been arranged with appeals for donations launched across the country, local collections, and financial assistance promised by large companies such as carmaker Volkswagen. Rhineland-Palatinate leader Malu Trayer warned that the damage was “very severe and will keep us occupied for a long time”, while his North Rhine-Westphalian representative Armin Lacet spoke of a “catastrophic, historic scale”.

The leader of the Conservative CDU party, President Angela Merkel’s next candidate and favorite in the September 26 legislative elections, Armin Lachet, like the entire political class, has called for a fight against climate change to “accelerate the pace.” The disaster “changes the election campaign”, putting the climate issue at the center of the debate, the Spiegel newspaper says. Angela Merkel, who is returning from a visit to the United States, plans to visit the flood scene soon.

Remco de Wall / AFP

National mourning in Belgium

Crossing the Axis of the Rhine in the west of Germany, it is mainly small rivers, somewhat protected, which are suddenly flooded by dozens of invaders under the influence of rain from their beds. Inhabited areas are mostly built in flood zones. Hundreds of people were evacuated on Friday evening after a dam collapsed in the Cologne region, if rain is to stop this weekend in the most affected areas.

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In Belgium, too, as the water receded, “we can still see catastrophic conditions,” said Kristin Defrain, the mayor of Liege. In this country, according to a more provisional estimate, the tragedy of at least 20 deaths and the disappearance of twenty people is “unprecedented,” said Prime Minister Alexander de Crew, who declared National Mourning Day on Tuesday.