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Alamy Stock Photo

Spanish Government believes 89 people still missing in flood ravaged Valencia

As many as 219 people confirmed killed in the deluge as the clean up continues across the region on the east coast of Spain.

THERE ARE STILL 89 people missing in the Valencia flood disaster as the Spanish government has pledged an €10.6 billion aid package.

As many as 219 people confirmed killed in the deluge as the clean up continues across the region on the east coast of the Iberian peninsula.  

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced a series of measures including aid to small and midsize businesses, self-employed workers and households that have suffered deaths, incapacity and damage to homes and belongings.

Tax relief and a three-month postponement to repaying mortgages and loans were also among the announcements, which Sanchez likened to the state’s intervention during the Covid-19 pandemic to protect the economy and livelihoods.

The government will take on all emergency spending by local councils linked to clearing mud, debris and ruined property and restoring drinking water, Sanchez told a news conference.

Spain has also requested aid from the EU solidarity fund, he added.

Security forces and emergency services personnel are working to repair damaged infrastructure, distribute aid and search for bodies in Spain’s largest peacetime deployment of its armed forces.

Sanchez said almost 15,000 troops, police officers and civil guards were in the eastern Valencia region that has suffered most of the deaths and destruction, up from 7,300 on Saturday.

Firefighters combed through piles of damaged vehicles and pumped water from inundated garages and car parks where more victims may be discovered.

Maribel Albalat, mayor of the ground-zero town of Paiporta, told public broadcaster TVE they were doing “better, but not well” with many streets still inaccessible and residents struggling to get a phone signal.

Rescuers in the southeastern town of Letur have found one of the missing bodies they were looking for, announced the central government’s representative in the Castilla-La Mancha region, Pedro Antonio Ruiz.

Two Chinese citizens, two Romanians and an Ecuadorian are among the dead, authorities in those countries have said. The floods also claimed three British victims, UK media have reported.

effects-of-the-dana-in-sedavi-on-november-5-2024-in-valencia-valencian-community-spain-today-a-week-has-passed-since-the-dana-devastated-the-valencian-community-so-far-there-are-211-fataliti A street scene in Valencia as the clean up continues. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

‘Dereliction of duty’

The disquiet among the survivors due to the lack of adequate warnings and lack of urgency in the response continues. 

That anger reached a breaking point in Paiporta on Sunday when crowds heckled and hurled mud at King Felipe VI, Queen Letizia and Sanchez.

The outrage was also palpable in Valencia – Spain’s third-largest city that was unharmed despite being a stone’s throw from the hardest-hit zones.

Local humourist Jose Antonio Lopez-Guitian, 61, had just returned from the town of Massanassa with his boots covered in mud and said residents were left to fend for themselves.

The situation was “a national disgrace” and “a dereliction of duty by all the institutions”, he said.

The floods affected more than 4,100 hectares (10,100 acres), the civil protection service said on X, using a map provided by the European Union’s Copernicus satellite.

Storms coming off the Mediterranean are common during this season. But scientists have warned that human-induced climate change is increasing the ferocity, length and frequency of extreme weather events.

“Climate change kills… we have to adapt to this reality,” Sanchez said at his news conference, lashing out at the “irresponsible discourse of deniers”.

© AFP 2024

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