Devastating flash floods in Spain kill more than 200 people, rescue operations underway

Date:

The death toll from Spain’s worst floods in a generation rose to 205 on Friday as rescue workers raised fears about dozens of missing people as hopes of finding survivors faded.

The floods since Tuesday overturned vehicles, collapsed bridges and blanketed towns with mud, the European country’s deadliest disaster in decades.

The organization coordinating emergency services in the hardest-hit eastern Valencia region said 202 people had been confirmed dead there.

Authorities in neighboring Castilla-La Mancha and Andalusia to the south had already announced a combined three deaths in their territories.

Rescuers armed with helicopters, drones and sniffer dogs descended into the water and searched the debris in search of dozens of people authorities believe are still missing.

The government has deployed 500 additional troops to the affected areas to reinforce the 1,200 troops already present for search, rescue and logistics operations. 500 more will be sent on Saturday.

Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlasca said the Civil Guard alone had rescued more than 4,500 people by Friday afternoon.

But three days after the disaster, hopes for more survivors are diminishing.

The courthouse in the city of Valencia has been converted into a morgue, where health workers wearing smocks carry stretchers covered with white sheets.

‘People are desperate’

Some cut-off areas remained without water, food or electricity for several days after the floods began, and many roads and railways remained impassable.

AFP journalists watched as engineers worked to remove abandoned cars scattered on broken railway tracks and slabs of tarmac from damaged roads and submerged fields.

French volunteers also announced that their staff had arrived in Spain on Friday with equipment to help clear debris, pump water and rescue victims.

In the devastated town of Paporata, near the city of Valencia, some residents complained that aid was arriving too slowly and that volunteers’ efforts were failing.

“There aren’t enough firefighters, shovels haven’t arrived,” Paco Clemente, a 33-year-old pharmacist, told AFP as he helped clear mud from a friend’s house.

Thousands of people remain cut off from electricity and telephone networks, but it is expected that the estimated number of missing people will reduce once connections are restored.

Government minister Angel Victor Torres vowed on Thursday an uncompromising response to the looting, amid signs of a breakdown in law and order in several places.

Police said they have arrested 50 people for incidents including theft from vehicles and a jewelery shop.

In the town of Aldea in the Valencia region, Fernando Lozano told AFP he saw thieves snatching goods from an abandoned supermarket because “people are a little desperate”.

“Until things get back to normal and supermarkets are open, it’s going to get much worse here.”

Valencia region leader Carlos Mazón told reporters that sports centers and schools were among the sites being used for emergency food distribution.

– Wave of solidarity –

An army of thousands of volunteers set out from Valencia on Friday armed with shovels, buckets and shopping trolleys loaded with food and nappies to help distressed neighbors in the city’s flooded suburbs.

Among them was Federico Martínez, a 55-year-old engineer who went to Paporata to help residents clear mud from their town.

“We took what we had at home and now it’s time to help. It’s emotional, it gives you goosebumps,” she told AFP.

Helpers also reached Valencia football club’s Mestalla stadium, where volunteers formed human chains to collect piles of essential supplies.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez praised the “infinite solidarity and dedication of Spanish society” on X and promised assistance “as long as necessary”.

But the Valencia regional government urged people to stay at home, saying it risked preventing emergency services from reaching the worst-hit areas.

Pope Francis expressed his solidarity with the victims and their families in Spain, which is historically a Catholic country.

Sanchez will chair another meeting on Saturday of a special committee made up of top Cabinet ministers to monitor the crisis.

Marlasca has been sent to Valencia to facilitate cooperation between the central government and regional authorities in Spain’s highly decentralized state.

The storm that caused the flooding was formed by cold air rising over the warm waters of the Mediterranean Sea and is common at this time of year.

But scientists warn that climate change driven by human activity is increasing the intensity, length and frequency of such extreme weather events.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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