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Fear, indignation among tourists in Majorca after floods
By �lvaro VILLALOBOS
S'Illot, Espa�a (AFP) Oct 11, 2018

Death toll rises to 12 in Majorca floods
Sant Lloren� Des Cardassar, Spain (AFP) Oct 11, 2018 - The death toll from flash floods that hit Spain's holiday island of Majorca rose to 12 on Thursday as information about the Spanish, German, Dutch and British victims began to emerge after they were identified.

An elderly British couple, their Spanish taxi driver and a holidaying German journalist on his way to the airport were among those who died as intense rain caused riverbeds to overflow with raging waters that tore through streets and swept cars away on Tuesday.

Rescue workers were still searching for a missing five-year-old boy who had been in a car with his mother and sister when they were hit by a barrage of water.

His sister survived, reportedly helped to safety by their mother, who died.

A massive clean-up was under way in the mud-covered streets of Sant Llorenc des Cardassar, one of the worst-hit towns, with excavation machines clearing streets of debris.

Soldiers used shovels to clear the thick mud from the streets of the town, 60 kilometres (40 miles) east of the island's capital of Palma.

Locals tried to recover lost valuables from the wreckage of their homes with the help of volunteers.

Some 900 emergency services workers were involved in the clean-up operation and the search for the missing boy, the public administration minister in the regional government of the Balearic Islands, Catalina Caldera, told reporters.

After Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's visit to the disaster zone in the island popular with foreigners, King Felipe VI and his wife Letizia were due to visit on Friday, a source at the royal palace told AFP, requesting anonymity.

- Knee-high floodwaters -

In total emergency services say seven men and five women were killed.

The British couple and a Dutch woman were among the dead.

The elderly couple were travelling in a taxi which got swept away by floodwaters, the central government spokesman said.

They were reportedly on their way to their hotel in the east coast fishing town of Cala Bona after landing at Palma airport.

Muddy waters rushed down roads, houses were flooded and vehicles piled up on top of each other, video footage showed.

"This is a disaster," said Antonio Galmes Riera, 55, as he used a big bucket to remove mud from his home with the help of two other men.

A damaged sofa and chair along with a basket of household objects which he will have to throw out sat outside the door of the home.

Marks on the walls showed floodwaters reached up to a height of at least a metre (three feet).

"I had very valuable stuff here. Look at this clock, it was worth over 2,000 euros ($2,300)," Riera told AFP as he pointed to an antique wall clock covered in mud.

Cati Morey, who has a beauty salon in Sant Llorenc, said they had to throw out furniture and "are trying to save everything we can".

- Nadal in minute of silence -

The regional government declared three days of mourning.

Spanish tennis star Rafael Nadal joined in a minute of silence at his academy in the neighbouring town of Manacor.

Spain's central government "has taken the first steps to ensure that those affected receive the necessary help as soon as possible," government spokeswoman Isabel Celaa told reporters.

Last year, 13.8 million foreign tourists visited the Balearic Islands, according to official statistics. The biggest numbers came from Germany and Britain.

Many more foreigners live in the archipelago.

Environmental group Ecologistas en Accion said "the tragedy in Sant Llorenc could have been avoided" if laws banning building in floodplains had been respected.

Meanwhile in southern France at least two people died when several cars were swept away by flash floods triggered by heavy rain Wednesday night, authorities said.

Gordana Rojko was holidaying in Majorca when raging waters swept past her hotel, trapping her and her husband inside for hours, one of scores of tourists left reeling by deadly flash floods in the Spanish island.

At least three of the 12 people who died were foreigners -- a British couple and an elderly Dutch woman -- after intense rain on Tuesday caused riverways to overflow on this Balearic island that relies heavily on tourists, especially Germans and Britons.

Two bodies discovered Thursday could be those of a missing German couple.

In the wake of the disaster, tourists recalled their fear and helplessness, with some angry at having their holiday disrupted.

- 'Terribly angry' -

"We couldn't get out for seven hours"," said Rojko, who lives in Germany and was visiting S'Illot, a badly-hit coastal town.

Her hotel is right next to the mouth of a river that had become a raging, overflowing torrent.

Rojko and her husband Robert let a British family with small children stay with them in their room as they were on the third floor, at a safe distance from the water that rose to the first storey.

"We're very disappointed, nobody came to ask for us. And we were surrounded by water," she told AFP, accusing hotel employees of inaction.

Robert, her 65-year-old husband who has visited Majorca every year since 1975, recalled the feeling of imminent danger and fear.

He said management was non-existent and receptionists did not speak English or German, making it difficult to understand what was going on.

For her part, Denise Browes, a British retiree in her 70s, said she was "terribly angry."

"I paid 400 pounds (460 euros), there's no swimming pool, no entertainment... there's nothing," due to the effects of the flood, she added.

In another hotel nearby, the Playa Moreia, the terrace is closed and the restaurant, on the ground floor, is full of mud, chairs and tables piled on top of each other.

Henriette Kruip, the hotel's Dutch manager, said they were forced to close on Wednesday as they "didn't have water, light or phones working, no computers, no lifts, nothing."

When the flash floods swept by, there were some 300 customers at the hotel, most of them German and Britons, and the restaurant was full.

Employees had to evacuate people fast, even if "the tourists didn't realise the danger and told us: 'hey, we're having dinner'."

Among the customers were Helmut and Anneliese Andler, a retired German couple holidaying with their grandchildren.

"We saw two cars go down the river, we've never seen this," said Helmut as he packed up his car to head to the island's capital Palma de Majorca with the family.

He said they would have to pay an additional night in another hotel.

"We're a little angry," said his wife, with a resigned smile.

- Shops, pubs closed -

The floods also hit local shops and restaurants hard too, forcing them to close earlier than they would have done in an island that lives off tourism.

Everywhere, English- and German-language menus are on display.

Guillem Mayol, who manages a bar with a terrace, said he probably lost "20,000 euros ($23,000) or more."

"We've lost our equipment -- the cold room, oven, dishwasher, appliances..."

Nearby, Antonia Puigros estimated her clothes shop would be closed for a week.

The racks were all empty as she and others cleaned the place.

"We can throw away all the wooden furniture," she said.

Luckily though, the clothes were spared as they were higher up.

As with other flood-hit areas, people were cleaning up the mud to try and get back to normal as fast as possible.

That's what Doris Holstz did, a German woman who has lived in Majorca for 16 years and co-owns a pub in S'Illot with her husband.

"Yesterday we cleaned for eight hours, it was horrible," she said, estimating she lost 2,000 euros.

Still, she's opening the pub again on Thursday.

Two dead in flash foods in southern France
Marseille (AFP) Oct 11, 2018 - At least two people died when several cars were swept away by flash floods triggered by heavy rain Wednesday night in southern France, authorities said.

The storms were part of a weather front that moved across the Mediterranean Sea, killing at least 10 in the Spanish island of Majorca and carrying away part of a motorway bridge in the Italian island of Sardinia.

Two bodies were found in southern France in an overturned car stranded just off the Riviera coast near the town of Sainte-Maxime, French police said.

It was thought the car was among several that were carried out to sea after being swept away by the Garonnette river, a statement from local authorities said.

Helicopters and police teams searched the area which received nearly 200 mm (2.3 inches) of rain overnight.

The fire service said it rescued 16 people.

In the Spanish holiday island of Majorca, rescue workers were searching Thursday for a five-year-old boy and two German holiday-makers still missing after the flash floods there.

In Sardinia, part of a motorway bridge crossing a river near Caglieri collapsed in heavy rains, but there were no casualties as the road had been closed following reports of subsidence.


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SHAKE AND BLOW
Two Britons among eight dead in Majorca flash floods
Madrid (AFP) Oct 10, 2018
At least eight people have died, including two British nationals, and several others are missing in flash floods on the Spanish holiday island of Majorca, authorities and emergency services said Wednesday. Footage broadcast on Spanish television showed cars being swept away by raging waters and houses flooded after the Mediterranean island was pounded with heavy rain in just a few hours. One witness told a local newspaper he had to swim out of his car through a window to safety. "I swam 500 ... read more

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