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Spain floods latest: British man among 95 dead in Valencia flooding as dozens still missing

The death toll continues to rise after the worst flash floods in three decades swept the eastern Spanish region of Valencia

Spain: Floods sweep several cars away in Valencia province, Spain

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At least 95 people, including a 71-year-old British man, have died in southern and eastern Spain following the deadliest flash flooding in the country for three decades.

Authorities fear the death will rise as other regions of Spain were yet to report victims and search efforts continued in hard-to-reach places to find dozens of missing people.

“The fact that we can’t give a number of the missing persons indicates the magnitude of the tragedy,” said minister of territory policies Angel Victor Torres.

A British man died in hospital hours after being rescued from his home on the outskirts of Alhaurín de la Torre, Málaga, according to the president of the Andalusian government, Juanma Morena.

He said the man had been suffering from hypothermia and died after suffering several cardiac arrests.

As torrential rain – amounting to a year’s worth in just eight hours in some areas – inundated cities such as Valencia and Malaga, many found themselves "trapped like rats" in their homes and cars, surrounded by rapidly rising floodwaters.

Police and rescuers used helicopters to lift people from their homes and cars as mud-coloured water quickly filled streets in dozens of villages, towns and cities.

Satellite imagery reveals scale of devastation

Satellite imagery has revealed before and after views of the disastrous Valencia floods. It shows green plains turned into a deluge of mud.

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 11:13

Body of one of the four missing people in Letur, Albacete, recovered

Flooding in Spain happened along a line stretching from the Bay of Cadiz to Valencia. But some areas were more affected than others with torrential rain in Letur in Albacete, where troops have been deployed for search and rescue operations.

Rescuers today confirmed they discovered the body of a man who was one of the four missing people in Letur.

In the immediate aftermath of the catastrophe, three bodies were found in Letur: two women aged 70 and 92.

Emergency workers carry an injured person in Letur
Emergency workers carry an injured person in Letur (Getty Images)

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 11:44

Spain deploys 14,898 police officers, troops in areas hit by flash floods

Spain has deployed 14,898 police officers and soldiers in the areas hit by flash floods last week, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Tuesday.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez (EPA)
Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 12:10

British couple missing for days in Spain floods found dead in car

A British couple has been found dead in their car days after severe flash floods swept through Spain.

Don Turner, 78, and his wife Terry, 74, had not been seen since Tuesday, when torrential rains began to batter Valencia. Ms Turner had told friends that they were “popping out” to shop for supplies.

The couple’s daughter, Ruth O’Loughlin, confirmed the bodies were discovered on Saturday. Ms O’Loughlin told BBC Radio WM that she found out her parents had died after receiving a message from their friends asking to call them.

British couple missing for days in Spain floods found dead in car

Terry and Don Turner had been missing since deadly downpours struck Valencia on Tuesday

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 12:30

Spain’s king vows to give ‘hope’ after angry residents throw mud on his visit to Valencia town

Spain’s king has vowed to give “hope” after angry residents threw mud at him during his visit to a flood-stricken town in Valencia.

The king’s comments came during a visit to the epicentre of their nation’s deadliest natural disaster in living memory, where a crowd of enraged locals hurled clots of mud left by the storm-spawned flooding at Felipe VI and his wife Queen Letizia.

Spain’s king responds after angry residents throw mud on his visit to Valencia town

Spain’s king has vowed to give “hope” after angry residents threw mud at him during his visit to a flood-stricken town in Valencia. More than 200 people have died and thousands of livelihoods have been shattered following last week’s devastating floods. The king’s comments came during a visit to the epicenter of their nation's deadliest natural disaster in living memory, where a crowd of enraged locals hurled clots of mud left by the storm-spawned flooding at Felipe VI and his wife Queen Letizia. After the visit on Sunday (3 November), in a meeting with emergency services, Felipe said the anger had to be dealt with.

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 13:00

Sanchez launches 10.6 billion euro aid plan

Spain‘s prime minister Pedro Sanchez approved a 10.6-billion-euro (£8.9 billion) relief package for 78 communities.

Outlining the plans, he compared them to measures taken during the Covid-19 pandemic and said they include direct payments of 20,000 euros to 60,000 euros to owners of damaged homes, among other financial aid for businesses and municipal governments.

Mr Sanchez said he would ask the European Union to help pay for the relief.

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 13:39

Vigilante groups patrol Spain’s flood-hit areas at night

Vigilante groups, angry at authorities’ response to Spain‘s worst flood disaster in decades, have taken to the streets of the Valencian suburb of Paiporta to prevent what they say are widespread robberies and looting after dark.

The informally organised groups of stick-wielding locals are patrolling one of the worst-affected areas, where more than 60 out of at least 217 victims of the disaster died.

Martin, 19, told Reuters that he and his friends were taking the law into their own hands because they believed police were not carrying out their duty to maintain public safety.

“We’re patrolling because we don’t want our neighbours to feel the insecurity they’ve been feeling the past few days due to various robberies,” he said. “People have already lost enough.”

Public anger has mounted over what residents say was a slow and insufficient response by authorities, which led to King Felipe and Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez being pelted with mud during their visit on Sunday.

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 14:04

British government drawn up plans to cope with extreme weather following Spain floods

Sir Keir Starmer’s senior ministers have drawn up plans to cope with extreme weather this winter following the devastating floods in Spain.

The cross-government work will ensure “we are domestically as resilient as we possibly can be” over the winter, Downing Street said.

At Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting, Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband pointed to warnings that 600,000 people in the UK could be at risk of flooding in future because of climate change.

Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden led the Cabinet briefing on winter preparations, adding that “recent events in Spain were a reminder of the impact that, for example, extreme weather can have on local communities”.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We’re always preparing for all eventualities, whether it’s the impact of extreme weather, whether it’s impacts on the NHS.”

The Prime Minister’s spokesman said: “The link was made to the fact that climate change can result in extreme weather events. We have obviously seen these very devastating scenes in Spain.”

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 14:49

Spanish police seek DNA samples for missing,

Spain's national guard on Tuesday asked relatives of people missing in deadly floods to provide DNA samples to identify bodies, as Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he was earmarking 10.6 billion euros ($11.6 billion) to help victims.

The government has declined to say how many people are missing almost a week on from the disaster. Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said only that it was a “significant number” and that in the absence of clear information, it was “best not to specify”.

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 16:26

Survivors describe tsunami-like horror of shopping centre flooding

Divers are still searching for bodies in the flooded underground car park of the Bonaire shopping centre in Valencia.

Emergency crews are navigating murky waters to locate potential victims at the shopping centre, using boats to access areas where at least a metre of water remains.

Survivors described the terrifying event to the Spanish newspaper El Mundo as “a nightmare” and “worse” than the “tsunami movie” with shop assistants recounting how they narrowly escaped as torrents of water surged into the complex as people were throwing up and having panic attacks.

Spanish national police offers stand outside the entrance of an underground car park
Spanish national police offers stand outside the entrance of an underground car park (AP)

Bonair is equivalent in size to 100 football fields with 123 shops including Zara and H&M, 34 restaurants, a bowling alley and 12-screen cinema.

One local wrote on social media: “I was lucky enough to be able to get my car out of the underground car park because they told us to evacuate. When I drove mine out there were still people and around 30 cars. It makes me frightened to think what they’ll find when they drain it.”

Rachel Hagan5 November 2024 17:30

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