More than 50 people have been killed in storms that have lashed parts of Spain, Portugal and France. Official sources say, 45 of the victims died in France, where many drowned or were hit by parts of buildings or falling trees. Winds of up to 140 kilometers per hour caused chaos as they moved from Portugal up through the Bay of Biscay. The storm system is moving north-eastwards and areas of France bordering Belgium and Germany are on alert for heavy rain and high winds. Worst affected have been the Vendee and Charente-Maritime regions on the western coast of France. Huge waves and strong gusts battered many coastal towns, spreading floods inland and destroying buildings. Residents took to their roofs in the Vendee region and police helicopters were in action attempting to locate and rescue them. At least a dozen people are said to be missing in France and 59 others injured. President Nicolas Sarkozy expressed his condolences to relatives of victims and said that he would visit the stricken area today. The French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said France would formally declare the storm a natural disaster freeing up funds to help communities rebuild. He said that the priority now would be to make all the homeless people and those still threatened by rising waters safe. He added that flood prevention defences would be strengthened. The storm system named Xynthia, has put five of the 95 French departments on red alert, only the second such warning since a new emergency system was introduced in 2001. More than a million homes in France have lost electricity from the Brittany peninsula in the west to the highlands of the Massif Central in the centre of the country.
News On AIR | March 1, 2010 10:52 AM
50 killed due to storms in Spain, Portugal and France