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  • Updated
    3
    Jun
    2013
    6:31pm, EDT

    Thousands evacuated as deadly floods swamp Europe

    Flood waters continue to rise in Europe, Austria, Germany and The Czech Republic have been hit hardest with thousands forced to flee their homes. The River Danube is among the rivers that have burst its banks and there are worries of flooding in Hungary and Slovakia. The flooding follows a downpour in which two months-worth of rain fell in just two days. ITV's Fatima Manji reports.

    By Andy Eckardt and John Newland, NBC News

    Floodwaters from heavy rains swamped five countries in Europe and threatened others, leaving at least eight people dead and nine missing.

    Germany, Austria, Poland, Switzerland and the Czech Republic have been affected, with officials in the Czech capital, Prague, closing the subway system, evacuating thousands of homes and warning other people not to come into the city. Slovakia and Hungary were preparing flood defenses on the Danube River.

    In Germany, rain levels that reached record highs in May contributed to widespread flooding across southern and eastern parts of the country.

    Michaela Rehle / Reuters

    The Bavarian town of Passau sits in high water on Monday.

    In the southern state of Bavaria, more than 20,000 firefighters and other rescue workers were battling rising water levels, especially in the southeast. The historic cities of Passau and Rosenheim declared states of emergency.

    Water in Passau, which is surrounded by three rivers, was at record levels, Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann said. "The situation is ... dramatic."

    Rescue workers and volunteers were filling sandbags, erecting temporary water barriers and helping to evacuate homes Monday morning, according to Passau's crisis management team.

    The German Army deployed more than 1,000 soldiers to Saxony and 600 to Bavaria to help with rescue and protection measures, and the air force sent helicopters to help with evacuations, officials said. Chancellor Angela Merkel planned to travel to the worst-hit areas on Tuesday. 

    In the eastern German state of Thuringia, more than 7,000 people had to spend the night in temporary shelters.

    In the Czech Republic, six people were dead and five were missing, despite more than 14,000 firefighters evacuating the homes of 7,000 people and carrying out 256 rescues, said national Fire and Rescue service spokeswoman Nicole Zaoralová.

    Spring showers are unrelenting in areas of Europe where days of rain have sparked serious flooding. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Czech officials declared a state of emergency and closed the subway system in Prague for the first time since devastating floods struck in 2002. People were urged not to travel to the capital, as waters of the Vltava River reached critical levels and threatened the city's ancient center. "The situation in Prague is still not stabilized," Zaoralová said.

    "We have problems in the whole area of the Czech Republic, especially Bohemia," an Interior Ministry spokesman said. "We are hoping that it will not be as bad as it was in 2002."

    In Austria, two people died, including a cleanup worker killed in a mudslide near Salzburg. Three more were reported missing.

    Train lines in many parts of northwest Austria were suspended Sunday due to landslides. In just two days, Austria had experienced as much rain as it normally would in two months, the Austrian meteorological center said.

    This weekend saw many southern German towns struck particularly hard. "In the past three days, more than 400 liters of rain per square meter [about 10 gallons per square foot] were measured in many regions that border the Alps," meteorologist Klaus Lessmann from German public broadcaster ZDF said.

    The German Weather Service, DWD, reported Monday that Germany had not seen such extreme soil moisture in the past 50 years.

    "Many fields are completely saturated and cannot hold more water," Johanna Anger from the DWD said.

    Roman Vondrous / CTK via AP

    A couple in a Prague suburb carry three kittens in a plastic bag through floodwaters on Sunday.

    Many residents in affected towns and villages were without power overnight and as a precautionary measure, many schools were kept closed on Monday.

    Evacuations were also taking place in Poland and Switzerland.

    "Rain, Rain, Go Away: Germany Drowns in Endless Downpour," Germany's Der Spiegel magazine headlined on its website.

    "There is hope on the horizon," Anger said. "There is still some rain today, but the weather forecast is better for the coming days."

    Despite less rain and better weather forecasts, however, officials were still on high alert.

    "Especially along the Danube, we cannot speak of an easing of flood situation at all," Herrmann said.

     

    Related stories:

    • PhotoBlog: European cities swamped
    • At least 16 dead after tornadoes, floods in US
    • Caught on camera: Teen pulled from Australian torrent

     

    This story was originally published on Mon Jun 3, 2013 8:10 AM EDT

    126 comments

    A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture. CO2 levels at 400ppb and rising steadily. Polar Ice almost gone. When you melt the polls ocean and air currents stagnate and weather patterns get stuck. It's the contrast between hot and cold that moves weather. When you melt the Arctic this is what you get.  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: switzerland, germany, deaths, europe, flooding, hungary, austria, poland, czech-republic, floods, slovakia, old-city, featured, prague, danube, updated
  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    1:28pm, EDT

    Police: No foul play in drowning of former Libyan minister

    Mahmud Turkia / AFP/Getty Images

    This file picture taken on March 19, 2011 in Tripoli shows Libyan Oil Minister Shokri Ghanem speaking during a press conference.

    By Reuters

    Libya's former prime minister and oil minister Shukri Ghanem, a prominent defector from Moammar Gadhafi's government, drowned in the River Danube, Vienna police said on Monday, but a Libyan security source suggested he could have been murdered.

    Ghanem's fully-clothed body was found in the Danube in Vienna on Sunday, a few hundred yards from his home. According to a preliminary autopsy there were no indications of foul play or suicide, spokesman Roman Hahslinger told reporters.


    A Libyan security source said they were investigating the death and believed he could have been pushed into the Danube by former Gadhafi agents.

    Former Libyan oil minister found floating in Danube

    His body was found at 8:40 a.m. on Sunday by a passerby near the entertainment area known as Copa Cagrana, where a footpath winds along the riverbank. He had spent Saturday evening watching television with his daughter.

    The daughter noticed at around 10 a.m. that her father was no longer at home, police said.

    The former Gadhafi confidant, who was also close to Gadhafi's son Saif al-Islam, was privy to potentially damaging information on oil deals with Western governments.

    Ghanem, 69, had been chairman of Libya's state-owned National Oil Corporation (NOC) before defecting last year several months after opponents of Gadhafi had risen up against the Libyan leader and begun a rebellion.

    Saad Djebbar, a UK-based Algerian lawyer who knew Ghanem and advised the Libyan government during the Lockerbie affair, told Reuters Ghanem was not the sort of man to kill himself. "It's a very mysterious death," he said.

    "He was worried about the future course of politics in Libya but he would not be the kind of man for suicide. He was very well introduced internationally and had lots of connections.".

    "Shokri Ghanem definitely is one of the guys who knew a lot and was one of the most powerful guys in the old regime," said David Bachmann, an Austrian Chamber of Commerce official based in Tripoli who knew Ghanem well.

    As NOC chairman since 2006, Ghanem helped steer Libya's oil policy and held the high-profile job of representing Libya at OPEC meetings, often visiting Vienna for meetings in that role.

    After making a final break with the Gadhafi administration last year, Ghanem first appeared in Rome, saying he had defected because of the "unbearable violence" being used by government forces to try to put down the rebellion.

    He had been working of late as an energy consultant in Vienna, where two daughters and their families also live.

    Hahsinger said police had been unaware of any "concrete" threats against Ghanem.

    Ghanem was still closely associated with Gadhafi's rule by Libya's new leaders and had ruled out returning home.

    "Definitely there were people there who did not like him or who thought that he had stolen billions and now he is in safety in Vienna, having a nice life," Bachmann said, adding it was common knowledge that Ghanem was often in Vienna.

    Bachmann said he would not have been surprised to read that former Libyan rebels had taken revenge on Ghanem, but said Gadhafi allies could also have held a grudge.

    "The problem was he was sitting between the chairs. For the old guys (in the Gadhafi regime) he was a defector, a kind of a rat. For the rebels he was also a rat because he did not defect early enough," Bachmann said.

    A woman who answered the phone at his home in a high-rise apartment block and identified herself as his daughter said: "Today we are still in a state of shock...right now I'm sorry I can't talk more."

    Bachmann said Ghanem had many friends in Austria and Italy and spent time shuttling between Vienna and Rome while trying to lead a quiet life.

    "He was 69 and was not a stupid guy. You figure out you have no political future and at a certain moment you say 'OK, let's finish this Libya story and try to enjoy my family and my grandkids and that's it'."

    Ghanem, who studied at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in Boston in the early 1970s, stood out among his fellow graduate students for his sharp intellect and infectious humor.

    While American students there worried about soaring petrol prices during the OPEC oil embargo of 1973, he eagerly explained and defended the Arab view of the emerging new world energy order.

    At an alumni reunion in 2004, he impressed his former classmates with his insider's account of the economic reforms he planned to introduce with the help of Gadhafi's son Saif al-Islam, whom he had mentored at OPEC headquarters at a time when the now-captured son wanted to make a name for himself outside of Libya.

    Ghanem said Saif al-Islam had persuaded his father to reform but he wasn't sure how far reforms could go. He said he only wanted to stay in office as long as he could modernize the economy. If Gadhafi didn't keep him, Ghanem said, he would happily retire to write one or two books on economics he had in mind.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    4 comments

    Somebody does not want to upset Libya's oil producing country. Geez to even print this headline about no foul play is just down right asinine.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: libya, vienna, drowned, danube, gadhafi, ghanem

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