France
to declare natural disaster after storms rip through crops
‘Orchard
of France’ is badly hit by extreme weather that has killed two
people
16
June, 2019
France will
declare a state of natural disaster after rain and hail storms lashed
a swathe of the south-east on Saturday, devastating crops.
The
flash storms, which brought hailstones as big as pingpong balls to
some areas, killed two people in France and
Switzerland, and injured at least 10 others.
The
worst-hit area, the Auvergne-Rhône-Alps region, is at the heart of
France’s food production and known as the “orchard of France”.
Didier
Guillaume, the agriculture minister, said the government would
organise a “general mobilisation” and introduce emergency
measures to deal with what he described as a catastrophe for farmers.
“Everything
will be done to help. The state of natural disaster will be
declared,” Guillaume told French television. “The goal is that no
farmers will have to shut down business.”
Nine French departments were put on alert at the weekend after warnings of violent storms, hail and winds. When the storms struck, they were brief but catastrophic, particularly in the Drôme and Isère.
“It lasted 10 minutes, but 10 minutes of a hail storm … there’s a lot of damage in a 10km zone in the Drôme,” the minister added.
Guillaume said many farmers had lost 80-100% of their crops. He added that the state of disaster would be declared when the extent of the devastation was known in “a day or two”.
The hailstones smashed car windscreens and also damaged homes, schools and pu
Marie-Hélène Thoravaldes, mayor of Romans-sur-Isère , which was also badly hit, said: “It was apocalyptic.”
FranceInfo published photographs showing uprooted trees, floods and storm destruction.
Videos on social networks showed the scale of the disaster. The local prefect tweeted photographs of a school with its windows smashed and of the agriculture minister meeting firefighters called in to deal with the flooding and damage.
The
hailstones smashed car windscreens and also damaged homes, schools
and public buildings. Several trees fell on train lines and fire and
emergency services struggled to deal with smashed roofs. More than
2,000 homes were without electricity on Sunday.
Marie-Hélène
Thoravaldes, mayor of Romans-sur-Isère , which was also badly hit,
said: “It was apocalyptic.”
Videos on
social networks showed the scale of the disaster. The local
prefect tweeted photographs
of a school with its windows smashed and of the agriculture minister
meeting firefighters called
in to deal with the flooding and damage.
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