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| Lourdes closed, 200 evacuated after flash floods | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: 19 Jun 2013, 01:11 AM (320 Views) | |
| skibboy | 19 Jun 2013, 01:11 AM Post #1 |
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18 JUNE 2013 Lourdes closed, 200 evacuated after flash floods ![]() The Roman Catholic sanctuaries pictured on August 15, 2010 in Lourdes, southern France. AFP - French authorities Tuesday shut the sanctuary ringing the cave at Lourdes, whose spring water many Catholics believe can miraculously cure illness, and evacuated about 200 people after flash floods. The preventive measure came a day after heavy rain and even some snowfall in the area led to rivers flowing well above their normal levels, even cutting off some roads. "The Sanctuaries are closed apart from the Upper Basilica," or a Gothic church above the grotto, the local prefecture of the Haute-Garonne area said in a statement. "We are very vigilant although for the present the situation is not catastrophic." Local officials said most of the 200 people moved were those camping in the area. In 2012, the Lourdes shrines were closed after flash floods that caused hundreds of thousands of euros in damage. Hundreds of pilgrims come to the famous grotto where the Virgin Mary reportedly appeared to a peasant girl in 1858 and whose water many believe has curative powers. Source:
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| Audi-Tek | 19 Jun 2013, 10:51 PM Post #2 |
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At least one dead as Lourdes hit with heavy flooding.![]() Roads in the region were inundated ![]() The nearby town of Saint-Beat was also badly flooded ![]() French Interior Minister Manuel Vells visited Lourdes today to survey the damage Heavy flooding in southwestern France has left at least one woman dead and forced the closure of the pilgrimage site at Lourdes. Several hundred pilgrims had to leave hotels and camp sites as flash floods caused havoc. The Limerick diocesan pilgrimage to Lourdes, which was due to take place this weekend, is among those to have been cancelled. The town's famous grotto has been completely flooded. Hundreds of people from the Limerick area were due to travel to Lourdes on Friday, but their trip has been cancelled due to flood damage to hotels and other buildings in the city. Source ............ http://www.rte.ie/ |
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| skibboy | 21 Jun 2013, 01:56 AM Post #3 |
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20 JUNE 2013 Lourdes facing summer closure as floods lash France ![]() The Gave de Pau bursts its banks in front of Rosary Basilica in Lourdes, southwestern France, on June 18, 2013. ![]() The Massabielle cave -- where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared to Bernadette Soubirous -- is partially flooded by the Gave de Pau in Lourdes, on June 18, 2013. ![]() A priest walks past a sanctuary that was flooded in Lourdes, on June 18, 2013. ![]() A tractor clears the road leading to Lourdes, after the Gave de Pau flooded the southwestern French town of Pierrefitte-Nestalas, on June 19, 2013. AFP - Extensive flood damage could force the Catholic pilgrimage site of Lourdes to remain closed to visitors for months, it emerged Thursday as France counted the cost of freak weather that has claimed three lives. Lourdes has been left devastated for the second time in less than a year by the Gave de Pau, the river that flows through the town, bursting its banks. Thousands of tourists have had to be evacuated from their inundated hotels and visits to the town's celebrated grotto, underground basilica and other religious sites have been suspended since Tuesday. "As the water has begun to recede, we are discovering bit by bit the extent of the damage," said Mathias Terrier, a spokesman for the Lourdes sanctuaries, acknowledging that it could be months before they reopen. "In all honesty, objectively we have to ask the question," he said. "The material damage is such that we can't see today how we could reopen in acceptable conditions and that will be the same for several weeks to come." Lourdes is visited by some six million people every year with the numbers in July and August reaching a peak of up to 40,000 every day. Many of the visitors are severely ill or handicapped, drawn to the town by the belief that its waters have curative powers. The Catholic Church recognises 68 miracles linked to a town where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared to a local peasant girl in 1858. Flooding last October cost an estimated 1.3 million euros of damage but the clean-up operation this times will be significantly more expensive, according to Thierry Castillo, who is in charge of the Lourdes diocese's economic affairs. "We will need the support of everyone," he told AFP. Although the level of the Pau river had receded significantly, those buildings that were not still under water were covered in mud, making it impossible for church officials to know the full extent of the damage. Firemen were pumping three metres of water out of the Basilica of St Pius X, an underground church with the capacity to welcome 25,000 pilgrims which was left unscathed by the October flooding. The surface of the road between the river and the Church of St Bernadette had been damaged by the waters to the extent that the foundations of the church were clearly visible. "It's an apocalyptic scene," said one member of the sanctuaries staff. The death toll from the flooding in the southwest of the country rose to three on Wednesday when a 54-year-old woman was found drowned in her Renault Clio in a flooded wheat field, 100m from a road that had been closed to traffic because of the rise in the level of the Gave de Pau. The flooding in the southwest has largely been the result of a sudden rise in temperatures in the Pyrenees, where cold weather had kept snow on the ground much later than is normal after record falls over the winter. Other parts of France have been hit by torrential rain or hail which have caused significant damage to some crops, notably vines in the area of the Loire valley where Vouvray sparkling is made.Xavier Beulin, the president of farmers' organisation FNSEA, estimated the damage at up to half a billion euros. "It could be as high as that because there are nearly 300,000 hectares that have been destroyed," Beulin said. Source:
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9:34 AM Jul 11