THAT THERE MAY BE A FAIRER SOCIETY IN GHANA - ONE IN WHICH ALL THE PEOPLE, NOT JUST A POWERFUL AND GREEDY FEW, BENEFIT FROM THE NATION'S WEALTH!
Tuesday, 26 November 2019
The Guardian/ Angela Giuffrida in Rome, Kim Willsher in Paris, and Helena Smith in Athens: Storms in France, Greece and Italy leave 'biblical destruction'
Seven people have died as violent storms swept through parts of France, Greece and Italy over the weekend, causing flash floods, landslides and the collapse of an overpass.
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Greek
media described the storms as leaving a trail of “biblical destruction”
in some areas of the country while the overpass collapse in northern
Italy brought back a chilling reminder of Genoa’s Morandi bridge giving way during a thunderstorm in August 2018, killing 43 people.
Flash
floods in France’s Côte d’Azur claimed the lives of four people, while
two others are believed to still be missing. Three of the victims were
found in cars that were swept away in floods in the Var region, and the
fourth was among a group being rescued by the fire brigade when the
dinghy carrying them to safety capsized.
A tractor in a flooded area after heavy rain in Roquebrune-sur-Argens, France. Photograph: Valéry Hache/AFP via Getty Images
One
of the worst affected towns was Roquebrune-sur-Argens in the Var, where
the Argens River rose seven metres. The French meteorological office
said three months’ worth of rain had fallen in less than 48 hours.
Members
of the French civil defence took part in rescue operations in a number
of flooded areas around Cannes and other coastal towns.
The orange alert was lifted in the Var and Alpes-Maritimes regions on
Monday as the water receded, leaving an estimated 4,500 homes without
electricity. Two other French departments, the Puy-de-Dôme and the
Gironde, were placed on high flooding alert.
Water reaches the houses after the Ticino River overflowed its banks in Pavia, Italy. Photograph: Antonio Calanni/AP
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Jean-Luc
Videlaine, the prefect for the Var region, said the rain had been of
“historic” intensity and there was considerable damage.
Jean-Pierre Hameau of Météo France said the storms and flooding
should not be blamed on climate change. Hameau said the phenomena, known
in France as cévenols, or Mediterraneans, were relatively frequent in the region.
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“They
occur three or six times a year. It often begins in September when the
Mediterranean is warm and there is rising hot air in the south,” Hameau
said.
“This usually happens in September and October, but sometimes we find
these conditions in November. It’s not linked to global warming. We had
these cévenols before and there hasn’t been an increase since
temperatures rose. However, we have noted an increase in the intensity
of the rains.”
A submerged vehicle in Cannes. Photograph: Frederic Dides/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock
Meanwhile
in Greece, two men in their 50s died when their sailing boat broke free
of its moorings and capsized after being hit by gale-force winds in
Antirio.
At least one other person was reported missing in Kineta, a beach
town west of Athens that was described as being the worst hit by the
storms. Emergency services said it could take days to clear the
extensive damage in Kineta, where uprooted trees and rockfalls from
surrounding hills also disrupted the road network.
Late
on Monday Greece’s public broadcaster said the extreme weather had
claimed another two lives on the island of Rhodes. A disabled and
elderly woman died when rainwater flooded her home, and a winter swimmer
perished at sea.
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The
fallout from heavy rainfall was such that authorities were forced to
close the highway connecting the Greek capital with Corinth and the
Peloponnese peninsula as services cleared the road network of tonnes of
mud.
A car moved by flood water after storms in Kineta, Greece. Photograph: Petros Giannakouris/AP
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The
fire service reported widespread flooding of homes, saying hours after
the downpours it was still trying to remove people trapped in buildings
engulfed by water and debris. The country was bracing itself for more
heavy rain later on Monday.
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In Italy,
a woman died after her car was swept away by the flood of the Bormida
River in the north of the country. There was flooding in Turin,
landslides in the Liguria region and Lake Como overflowed on Sunday,
while the River Ticino burst its banks overnight in the northern city of
Pavia. Venice, which has suffered recurrent flooding in recent weeks,
was again hit with acqua alta, or high water. The Emilia-Romagna region was on high alert for extreme weather on Monday.
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Italy’s
prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, said the government had earmarked €11bn
of investments intended to accelerate projects to protect the country
from extreme weather events.
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