Friday, May 03, 2024 | Shawwal 23, 1445 H
overcast clouds
weather
OMAN
30°C / 30°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Storms kill 11 in Mediterranean, east Europe

No Image
minus
plus

VOLOS: Storms have killed at least 11 people in Greece, Türkiye and Bulgaria, with a Greek region hit by more rain in 24 hours than it normally sees in a year, officials said on Wednesday.


A period of extreme heat has given way to heavy storms, turning streets in northwestern Türkiye into rivers and hitting Greece with unprecedented downpours as it recovers from weeks of wildfires.


"Everything saved from the fire we had in July has been destroyed by this bad weather," said Christos Kleftakis, 49, in Nea Anchialos, near the central Greek city of Volos.


"This is unprecedented — these severe weather events, the strength of the rain, the wind. I've never seen anything like that before," he added.


Combined with other factors such as urbanisation and land-use planning, these more intense rainfall events contribute to flooding.


Greece's central Magnesia region got rainfall of 600-800 millimetres over a 24-hour period including Tuesday, a government meteorologist told reporters in Athens.


Dimitris Ziakopoulos called it an "unprecedented phenomenon" for the country's meteorological data, which dates back to 1955.


The storm, dubbed "Daniel" by Greek weather experts, has been battering the country since Monday, mainly affecting the Magnesia region and its capital city Volos, 300 kilometres north of Athens.


The torrential rains in Greece follow weeks of devastating wildfires.


"This is an extreme phenomenon", said Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.


A massive blaze raging over the last two weeks destroyed swathes of the Dadia national park in the northern Evros region, which officials say is now under control.


In Istanbul, the downpours came after a particularly dry summer that saw the water reservoirs of the city of 16 million people fall to nine-year lows.


Turkish emergency services said four people have died and two were missing in floods that hit the northwestern city of Kirklareli.


Bulgaria's Black Sea coast has also been hit by the heaviest rains in years, killing at least three and leaving tourists stranded.


Heavy rain and thunderstorms since late on Monday caused rivers to overflow, damaging bridges and cutting off access in the region south of the coastal city of Burgas.


"It's a disaster... the steep terrain (along the coast) creates an enormous danger," Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov said, adding "long-term solutions" would be needed to secure the area. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon