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regular-article-logo Sunday, 24 November 2024

Two people have died in floods in southern Germany; the situation remains tense

Chancellor Scholz said that 'this is not just one event like there have been for centuries,' and that a succession of floods in recent times shows 'we cannot neglect the task of halting man-made climate change'

AP Berlin Published 03.06.24, 04:47 PM
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Bavaria State Prime Minister Markus Soeder visit Reichertshofen, in the aftermath of severe flooding, near Ingolstadt, Germany.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Bavaria State Prime Minister Markus Soeder visit Reichertshofen, in the aftermath of severe flooding, near Ingolstadt, Germany. Reuters.

The death toll in floods across a large part of southern Germany rose to two on Monday as the body of a missing woman was found. Chancellor Olaf Scholz visited the flooded region and officials warned that water levels could rise further in some areas.

The body of the 43-year-old, whom rescuers had been looking for since Sunday morning, was found in a basement in the Bavarian town of Schrobenhausen, police told German news agency dpa. A firefighter was found dead in nearby Pfaffenhofen on Sunday after an inflatable boat he and colleagues were using capsized.

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Persistent heavy rain led to widespread flooding in the southern states of Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttemberg over the weekend. The floods caused extensive transport disruption, with long-distance rail routes to Munich from the north and west out of action on Monday.

Scholz visited Reichertshofen, north of Munich, inspecting a sandbagged river bank and meeting regional officials including Markus Söder, Bavaria's governor.

Söder said that the situation “remains critical and tense,” with water receding in some places but new flooding and evacuations elsewhere. He noted that water levels are expected to rise in the city of Regensburg and further down the Danube.

Scholz said that “this is not just one event like there have been for centuries,” and that a succession of floods in recent times shows “we cannot neglect the task of halting man-made climate change”.

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