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Merkel in third visit to flooded areas

Published: 11 Jun 2013 - 06:18 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 11:01 pm

WITTENBERGE,  Germany: German Chancellor Angela Merkel praised rescue efforts on her third trip to water-logged regions yesterday as central Europe grappled with historic floods that have killed at least 19 people.

Parts of north Germany remain threatened by the swollen River Elbe where a dyke was breached overnight in Saxony-Anhalt state, adding hundreds more to the many thousands of residents already evacuated in the country.

“We know of course that the damage will be in the billions,” Merkel said on a visit to Wittenberge, in Brandenburg state, after last week pledging immediate aid of ¤100m as the deluge hit region after region.

Ironically under sunny skies, Merkel said the full extent of the damage had to be established as she spoke to volunteers racing to fill sandbags, calling the work of teams who have mobilised “impressive”. “One can be rather proud of our country when one sees how the people are pulling together in such a difficult hour,” Merkel commented, after last week also visiting four other flood-hit states.

The torrent of flood waters in Germany has turned vast areas into a sea of brown water and sparked a mass mobilisation of emergency workers, as well as what Merkel’s spokesman said was the biggest ever army deployment in the country.

The bursting of a dyke in Fischbeck, where a torrent of the Elbe forced a 50-metre long crack, showed the situation was still especially tense in places, with 2,500 people evacuated according to a local emergency task force.

The impact from the flooding on a railway bridge led to disruptions yesterday in high-speed services between Berlin and the cities of Hanover and Frankfurt, Germany’s Deutsche Bahn rail service said. In Magdeburg where more than 23,000 people had been told to leave their homes, the historically high levels of the Elbe from Sunday were falling faster than expected but authorities remained prudent.

“There’s a slight gasp of relief but still no relaxation,” city council member Klaus Puchta said.

Water levels dropped to 7.12 metres early yesterday after reaching a historic high of 7.46 metres on Sunday — nearly four times its normal level and exceeding that of previous record floods of 2002. 

After fearing the worst, Hungary breathed a sigh of relief yesterday as flood defences held firm, averting the worst of the floods, and the mighty River Danube began to recede after reaching a historic high. After the Danube in Budapest reached a historic peak of 8.91 metres (29 feet) on Sunday evening, the water level began to fall early yesterday.

 AFP