Floods
hit UK, with worse weather on the way
Six-month-old
baby is rescued from freezing waters as rain and melting snow cause
flooding in parts of Britain
27
January, 2013
Homes
were flooded, motorists stranded and travel disrupted as pelting rain
combined with melted snow to cause problems across parts of the UK
over the weekend – but much more severe weather could be on the
way.
The
worst of the flooding over the weekend was to be found in parts of
the south-west of England, the Midlands, East Anglia and Wales, where
hundreds of flood warnings and alerts were put in place.
However,
harder rain, plus some gale force winds, are on the way, raising
concerns that the sort of serious flooding that caused chaos before
Christmas could be repeated.
In
Somerset a heroic dock master dived into freezing cold waters to
rescue a six-month-old baby boy after his buggy was blown in by
strong winds.
The
infant, who was strapped in the buggy, was swept into the water as
his mother walked along Watchet Harbour, Somerset at 8am on Sunday.
After
hearing screams for help George Reeder, 63, dived in and pulled the
pushchair to the wall, before a member of the public helped attach a
rope and haul it to dry land.
The
baby was revived by a passerby who administered CPR, before being
taken to hospital, where he is now thought to be out of intensive
care.
Reeder
said he heard screaming from a couple of hundred yards away before
jumping on his bike to see what had happened.
"I
just jumped in and pulled the pushchair back over to the edge of the
quay, and then somebody put a rope down over and I tied it on and
they lifted it out.
"As
far as I know, what the police told me was that the wind blew the
buggy in."
Around
the country many rivers and streams swollen by the melted snow could
cause problems and in some places spring tides are expected to add to
the difficulties faced by people living close to the coast.
By
Sunday evening the Environment Agency had more than 70 flood warnings
– meaning flooding is expected – and more than 325 alerts
(flooding is possible) in place.
Agency
workers were worried that a string of riverside communities,
including Tewkesbury in Gloucestershire and Wyre Piddle in
Worcestershire, could be flooded as levels in the Severn and Avon
rose. There was also concern about rivers in Devon and Dorset, which
were both badly hit by flooding in November.
Further
north firefighters helped pump out homes in Market Drayton and near
Whitchurch in Shropshire. A few homes were also flooded in north
Wales and Pembrokeshire, south-west Wales.
Motorists
were rescued from cars in Staffordshire, the Yorkshire Dales and
Dorset while eight people were injured in a series of accidents on
the M4 in south Wales during a hailstorm.
In
North Yorkshire a canoeist was airlifted to hospital after getting
into the trouble in the River Swale near Ripon. Rescuers also battled
to save 10 sheep from the River Severn in mid Wales.
The
Met Office warned that more wetness is approaching courtesy of a deep
Atlantic depression. It has issued severe weather warnings for
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
On
Monday the south-west of England is expected to bear the brunt of the
rain again and the Met Office said that because it would be falling
on saturated ground, flooding may well follow.
On
Tuesday, the south-west is due to be battered again, along with other
areas of the south of England and much of Wales. Together with the
heavy rain, strong to gale-force winds are predicted to spread across
the country. Gales and severe gales are due to cause problems in
Scotland on Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning.
It
may be cold comfort for those affected by flooding this week but
local flood defence schemes across the south-west have received a
boost of £721,000. The south-west regional flood and coastal
committee, which is made up of local authorities from across the
region, will announce the list of projects it will support next
month.
Committee
chairman James Morrish said: "The increase is a clear statement
of the determination to address the backlog of flood defence needs in
Devon, Cornwall, Plymouth, Torbay and the Isles of Scilly,
particularly following the repeated flooding throughout 2012 which
saw over 1,000 properties flooded in 200 locations."
By
the end of the week — exactly 60 years on from the disastrous flood
of 1953 that claimed hundreds of lives in the east of England — the
Met Office believes the weather should have become calmer but it
could be chilly again.
Landslides
Leave 16 Dead, 9 Missing in Indonesia
Rescuers
found four more bodies Sunday, bringing the death toll to 16 in two
separate landslides triggered by torrential rain in western
Indonesia, including five geothermal workers, officials said.
ABC,
27
January, 2013
The
worst landslides happened in Tanjung Sani of Agam district in West
Sumatra province, where 20 houses were buried when mud and rocks fell
from surrounding hills at dawn on Sunday, killing 11 villagers, said
disaster official Ade Edward.
He
said six injured villagers were being treated at a hospital,
including one in critical condition. The bodies of the dead,
including three children aged 8 and 9, have been evacuated and
rescuers using heavy digging equipment are searching for nine people
who reportedly were buried under the mud and feared dead.
Hundreds
of terrified survivors fled their hillside homes for tents on safer
ground, fearing more of the mountainside would collapse under
continuing rain, Edward said.
In
the neighboring province of Jambi, days of heavy rains triggered a
landslide in a drilling field owned by PT. Pertamina Geothermal
Energy, a state-run company, late Saturday. The death toll there rose
to five after searchers pulled out the body of another worker from
the mud on Sunday, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho from the National
Disaster Mitigation Agency.
Company
official Adiatma Sardjito said 60 workers survived Saturday's
landslide.
"The
workers were having dinner when the landslide suddenly occurred,"
Sardjito said, adding the disaster left five others hurt.
He
said the landslide did not impact their production.
Seasonal
downpours cause frequent landslides and flashfloods each year in
Indonesia, a chain of 17,000 islands where millions of people live in
mountainous areas or near fertile flood plains.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.