Spain floods latest: Spanish PM warns ‘this hasn’t finished’ as new storm forecast amid frantic search efforts
Death toll continues to rise after worst flash floods in three decades swept Spanish region of Valencia
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Your support makes all the difference.Spain’s prime minister has urged residents to stay at home as he warned devastation caused by flash flooding is “not finished” - with more extreme weather to come.
Valencia has now been declared a “disaster zone” by Pedro Sanchez, who announced the measure as he visited some of the worst affected areas on Thursday.
With at least 95 already killed, authorities fear the death toll could rise as emergency services continue their desperate search for the dozens of people still missing.
Spain’s transport minister, Oscar Puente, said that rescue workers will be facing the task of recovering bodies believed to still be trapped in cars.
Torrential rain – amounting to a year’s worth in just eight hours in some areas – inundated cities such as Valencia and Malaga, many found themselves “trapped like rats” in their homes and cars, surrounded by rapidly rising floodwaters.
Many affected are preparing for more torrential rain, after Spain’s meteorological service issued a series of fresh warnings - including the most severe kind - on Thursday.
Have you been affected by this? Get in touch at athena.stavrou@independent.co.uk.
Crops expected to be badly damaged
One of Spain’s largest farmers’ groups said it expected significant damage to crops.
Spain is the world’s largest exporter of fresh and dried oranges, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity, and Valencia accounts for about 60 per cent of the country’s citrus production, according to Valencian Institute of Agriculture Investigations.
Scientists say extreme weather events are becoming more frequent in Europe due to climate change. Meteorologists think the warming of the Mediterranean, which increases water evaporation, plays a key role in making torrential rains more severe.
Full report: More than 90 dead after torrential rain causes flash flooding
More than 90 dead after torrential rain brings flash flooding to Spain
Emergency services have urged people to refrain from any kind of road travel and to follow further updates from official sources
At least 95 people, dogs and horses killed
Dogs and horses also died, as well as at least 95 people, a resident of Alora in the south said.
Power company i-DE said about 150,000 customers in Valencia had no electricity.
Emergency services in the region urged citizens to avoid all road travel and to follow further official advice, and a military unit specialised in rescue operations was deployed in some places to help local emergency workers.
“(The floodwaters) took away lots of dogs, lots of horses, they took away everything,” said Antonio Carmona, a construction worker.
‘A river came through'
Residents in the worst-hit places described seeing people clambering onto the roofs of their cars as a churning tide of brown water gushed through the streets, uprooting trees and dragging away chunks of masonry from buildings.
“It’s a river that came through,” said Denis Hlavaty, who waited for rescue on a ledge in the petrol station where he works in the regional capital.
“The doors were torn away and I spent the night there, surrounded by water that was 2 metres (6.5ft) deep.”
Footage shot by emergency services from a helicopter showed bridges that had collapsed and cars and trucks piled on top of each other on highways between flooded fields outside the city of Valencia, on Spain’s east coast.
Three days of mourning after Spain’s deadliest flooding in nearly 30 years
Spain’s government said it would declare three days of mourning starting tomorrow for those killed.
The death toll appears to be the worst in Europe from flooding since 2021 when at least 185 people died in Germany.
It is the deadliest flood-related disaster in Spain since 1996, when 87 people died near a town in the Pyrenees mountains.
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said Europe was ready to help. “What we’re seeing in Spain is devastating,” she said on social media.
At least 95 now dead
The death toll from flash floods in Valencia and eastern Spain has reached at least 95, Spanish officials said.
Spanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez said dozens of towns had been flooded.
“For those who are looking for their loved ones, all of Spain feels your pain,” Mr Sanchez said in a televised address. “Our priority is to help you. We are putting all the resources necessary so that we can recover from this tragedy.”
British man, 71, killed in floods
A 71-year-old British man has been confirmed as one of the casualties of the flash floods.
President of the Andalusian government, Juanma Morena, said the man had died in hospital hours after being rescued from his home on the outskirts of Alhaurín de la Torre, Málaga.
He added that he was suffering from hypothermia and died after suffering several cardiac arrests.
Flooding brought worst day of my life, says mayor
The mayor of a town where six people died and more were unaccounted for says it was the worst day of his life.
Ricardo Gabaldon, mayor of Utiel in Valencia, told national broadcaster RTVE: “We were trapped like rats. Cars and rubbish containers were flowing down the streets. The water was rising to 3 meters (9.8ft).”
Searchers worked to find survivors and victims, with countless numbers still missing.
Pictured: Dana storm leaves destroyed towns and hundred of displaced
Dana storm causes £5.6m in damages in southern Spain
The City Council of El Ejido (Almería) has estimated that the damages caused by heavy rain and hailstorms since last Monday amount to €6.8 million (£5.6m) in public spaces, buildings, and municipal facilities.
Mayor Francisco Góngora and local authorities, who have quantified the damages, said that the destruction has been "substantial and severe”.
Mr Góngora said the storm has affected "more than thirty municipal buildings,” particularly in the areas of El Ejido, Santa María del Águila, Almerimar, and Las Norias.
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