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Balkans flooding triggers 3,000 landslides

International rescue teams are battling thousands of landslides as they try to reach victims of u...
Newstalk
Newstalk

07.44 19 May 2014


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Balkans flooding triggers 3,00...

Balkans flooding triggers 3,000 landslides

Newstalk
Newstalk

07.44 19 May 2014


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International rescue teams are battling thousands of landslides as they try to reach victims of unprecedented flooding in the Balkans.

At least 48 people are now known to have lost their lives in the disaster across Bosnia and Serbia with the death tolls expected to rise further.

Around 3,000 landslides have been reported across the region blocking roads and damaging even more homes.

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Newstalk's Breakfast got the latest from Bojana Barlobac, Associate Editor at Balkan Insight:

In the submerged Serbian town of Obrenovac thousands of people have fled.

One of the evacuees, Father Dragan Todorovic (40), said: "I carried my kids out on my back, then waited 12 hours to be rescued myself.

"The house was new, built two years ago for €100,000. What now?"

Power stations

Teams are battling to save key power stations including the giant site at Kostolac near the capital Belgrade.

Alma Muslibegovic, a spokeswoman for the country's EPS power firm, said: "The army, police, volunteers and Kostolac employees are using all mechanisation and are piling up sandbags to slow the river flow and prevent it from entering the power generation system."

Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said a fire and flooding of surface mines at the 1,300 megawatt Kolubara coal-fired power plant southwest of Belgrade had caused damage of "at least €100 million euros".

Economic impact

Authorities say the economic impact of the floods will be huge, devastating the agricultural sector vital to both the Serbian and Bosnian economies.

"The danger today is less than it was yesterday, but we have to control the Sava as much as we can," Mr Vucic told a televised Cabinet session.

"These are the kind of waters not seen in 1,000 years, let alone 100."

Floodwaters have also disturbed land mines leftover from the region's 1990s war, along with warning signs that marked the unexploded weapons.


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