Four
people have died, three more are missing and over 1,500 have been
affected by a devastating deluge that inundated the region, already
severely battered by the deadly disaster in July.
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RT,
22
August, 2012
Four
people have died, three more are missing and over 1,500 have been
affected by a devastating deluge that inundated the region, already
severely battered by the deadly disaster in July.
Three
of the dead have already been identified, Emergency Ministry says.
They are reported to have been tourists.
The
overall number of those affected by the disaster currently stands
between 1,500 and 1,800 people, according to different sources.
The
heavy rainfalls battering the area in the last 24 hours – in some
places the average monthly falls – triggered the flooding.
As
a result, the Novomikhailovsky, Tenginka and Lermontovo settlements
in Russia’s southern Krasnodar Region were flooded. The level of
water was up to 2.5 meters high, according to local officials.
The
waters have damaged over 600 households in the area, plus a school
and a hospital, from where 150 patients had to be evacuated.
A
state of emergency has again been introduced in the area. Over 1,300
rescuers are currently working at the scene alongside volunteers.
With
the water level gradually receding, people have begun to return to
their homes, battered by the disaster.
The
flooding has caused massive electricity disruptions. Local residents
also report food shortages via Twitter. It has been reported more
than 11,000 people are still without electricity.
Witnesses
also post on Twitter that there’s currently a 5-kilometer traffic
jam on the road to Novomikhailovsky.
Alert
criticism
Emergency
officials say the sirens and loudspeakers were used to alert the
local population and tourists, and the state of emergency was
introduced as early as 1am local time.
However,
some of the residents point out they couldn’t hear anything because
of the rain, and that mobile communication has also been disrupted.
“The
road turned into a wild torrent, bridges were destroyed by the
floodwaters. Some of the neighbors say that the sirens were wailing,
but we heard nothing: the patter of the rain covered it all,” one
of the witnesses reports, according to Interfax.
The
disaster comes a month after catastrophic flooding destroyed the city
of Krymsk, also in the Krasnodar Region.
Over
170 people lost their lives in that disaster, with 35,000 people
having been affected by the worst flooding to hit the region in
decades.
The
deluge took the greatest toll on the city of Krymsk, but also
inundated the cities of Gelendzhik, Novorosiisk.
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