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| Czechs braving mud say floods milder than 2002 | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: 8 Jun 2013, 11:03 PM (91 Views) | |
| skibboy | 8 Jun 2013, 11:03 PM Post #1 |
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08 JUNE 2013 Czechs braving mud say floods milder than 2002 ![]() People sail on a boat on June 6, 2012 in flooded village of Kozarovice, Czech Republic. ![]() Prague Castle guards help people to clean their house near the Vltava river on June 7, 2013. ![]() A general view taken on June 6, 2012 shows the flooded village of Kozarovice, in the Czech Republic. AFP - Returning home to mud and stagnant water, flood-hit Czechs said better preparation and safety measures had saved them from being as hard-hit by floodwaters as they were a decade ago. Residents are still haunted by memories of the "flood-of-the-century" that swept the country in 2002, killing 17 people and leaving behind damage to buildings some of which remain un-repaired to date. Officials had underestimated the floodwaters back then, with Prague mayor Igor Nemec calling the situation "absolutely excellent" moments before the capital's underground was flooded. "The authorities are better prepared this time, everything went faster," Zuzana Wildova, a young volunteer in the capital's Lahovicky suburb who also helped out at the 2002 flood, told AFP. Whereas several underground stations were underwater and took months to reopen then, this time the metro resumed operation after three days, thanks in part to anti-flood measures taken in the last decade. The floods brought on by torrential spring rain that have swept through central Europe for the past week have killed at least 14 people, 10 of them in the Czech Republic. Emptying a house of a bucket of water to pour into a drain Friday, Wildova said the flood barriers had played a major role in staving off the havoc of 2002. "The barriers helped a lot and they were built faster," she said in a neighbourhood reeking of stagnant water. Firefighters erected 17 kilometres (11 miles) of the barriers in Prague alone, saving most of the city centre. In financial terms, the 2002 flooding caused damage worth 73 billion koruna, equivalent to 94 billion koruna (3.7 billion euros, $4.9 billion) today. While it is too soon to pinpoint a sum this time -- with rivers not yet back to their regular levels -- Prague-based analyst Jan Bures expected the damage to be in the 10-20 billion koruna range. "I don't think the floods could seriously threaten the Czech economy," the CSOB bank analyst said, adding that the disaster may in fact boost the construction sector. Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas for his part said damage could reach "a two-digit figure" in billions of koruna. Residents say the country avoided as much negative impact this time thanks to floodwaters that did not rise as fast or as high. "In 2002, we had 20-30 centimetres (eight-12 inches) of water on the second floor," said Karel Singer, a Lahovicky resident in his eighties. "Now we have just have a metre on the ground floor," he told AFP. According to the water company Povodi Vltavy, a monitoring station in the south of Prague recorded floodwaters rising at over 3,000 cubic metres per second on Tuesday, against 5,160 on August 14, 2002. Despite faster mobilisation than a decade ago, officials have still drawn criticism, with some people questioning why there was flooding at all given the lower water levels. Josef Rihak, the governor of badly-hit central Bohemia, noted this week that dams up the Vltava river from Prague could have let water flow faster if officials "had built the defences earlier in Prague". But people in the streets said they were happy with steps taken by the authorities. "It's better than it was in 2002. I think the city handled it quite well this time," Jindrich, a man in his fifties, told AFP this week while watching the floodwaters sweep through Prague. While officials built dykes in many places swept up by the 2002 flood, the village of Zalezlice for example has failed to build a solid system since that disaster. Flattened at the last flood, that village north of Prague suffered again this time, though the damage was not as extensive. While some residents blamed authorities for acting slowly, others noted that landowners had decided not to sell plots for the dykes, which prompted a reaction from the farm ministry. "I am convinced we should treat the construction of anti-flood dykes just like any other publicly beneficial project," Agriculture Minister Petr Bendl said Thursday. "If there's no deal with the owners, we will have to start expropriating." Source:
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| skibboy | 9 Jun 2013, 11:01 PM Post #2 |
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09 JUNE 2013 Hungary defences hold as Danube flood nears Budapest ![]() Hungarian volunteers pass sandbags in Pilismarot 50 kms west of the capital Budapest on June 8, 2013. AFP - Hungary's flood defences held firm Sunday morning as central Europe's worst floods in a decade moved through the northwest of the country toward the capital Budapest. So far, however, Hungary has avoided the chaos seen elsewhere in central Europe. No casualties or serious injuries have been reported yet although authorities say around 1,000 people have been evacuated from towns and villages along the river. So far, around six million sandbags have been used in barriers. The swollen river is forecast to peak at 8.95 metres (29 feet) in Budapest late Sunday. By morning the water level had already climbed to 8.83 metres, exceeding the previous historic high of 8.60 recorded in 2006. Authorities in the capital said Sunday that the flood barriers now in place are high enough to protect even the most threatened parts of the city. "The flood peak is approaching the heart of the country. Two very important days are ahead of us, as the capital is the most densely populated part of the country," Prime Minister Viktor Orban said early Sunday. Speaking in the town of Esztergom (65 kilometres, 40 miles north of Budapest) where he spent the night, he said the water level there had not increased for hours and that "the city is safe". The bridge linking Slovakia and Hungary at Esztergom was closed to traffic early Saturday. Efforts will now focus on the defence of towns and villages between Esztergom and Budapest, he added. Authorities were forced to bring food and water supplies by boat to three villages cut off due to closed roads -- Pilismarot, Domos and Kisoroszi. Emergency personnel and volunteers worked non-stop through Saturday and overnight to prop up barriers and dykes as previous record water levels were toppled throughout northwest Hungary. By Sunday morning, however, water levels in several locations in northwest Hungary began to fall. In Budapest water has covered roads running along the river since Wednesday, one metro station has been closed, while a special radio station, Flood FM, began broadcasting latest flood news on Saturday. Heavy rainfall Saturday afternoon hampered workers' efforts to bolster the city's flood barriers and also caused drains to overflow into several streets downtown, forcing authorities to pump the water into the river. Mayor Istvan Tarlos said Saturday that the most endangered parts of the city -- Margaret island in the centre and the Romai residential area north of the city -- will be safe unless the water climbs to 9.30 metres, nearly a half metre above the forecast peak. "It is now certain that the water level will not exceed nine metres in Budapest," he said. Source:
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9:34 AM Jul 11