UK
flood misery worsens: River Thames bursts its banks
The
River Thames has burst its banks after reaching its highest level in
years, flooding riverside towns upstream of London.
11
February, 2013
Residents
and British troops piled up sandbags to protect properties from the
latest bout of flooding, but the river overwhelmed their defences in
several places, leaving areas including the center of the village of
Datchet underwater.
The
Environment Agency has issued 14 severe flood warnings meaning
there's a danger to life along the Thames east of Windsor, about 32
kilometres from London.
Its
chief executive, Paul Leinster, said "extreme weather will
continue to threaten communities this week" with more Thames
flooding expected tomorrow.
There
were no flood alerts for the part of the river that flows through
London. That stretch is protected by the Thames Barrier, a series of
giant metal gates downstream of central London that can be closed
against tidal surges. By holding back the tide, the barrier also
creates more space in the river for excess water from upstream to
flow down to the sea.
England
has had its wettest January since 1766. Its southwest coast has been
battered repeatedly by storms and a large area of the low-lying
Somerset Levels in the southwest has been under water for more than a
month.
The
disaster has sparked a political storm, with the Prime Minister David
Cameron's Conservative-led government facing criticism from many
residents for allegedly failing to dredge rivers and take other
flood-prevention measures.
Both
Cameron and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg visited flood-hit areas
yesterday as the government struggled to take charge of the flooding
crisis.
Cameron
denied the government had been slow to respond.
"We
have been dealing with it from the very moment it started," he
said. "Where money was needed, we provided more money. Where
military was needed, I made sure the military was deployed."
This is an excellent report. The correspondant says that people's homes are being flooded from below - by the rising water table.
There is talk of parts of flooded Somerset being given back to the sea
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