Berliner Boersenzeitung - Rallies mark one month since Spain's catastrophic floods

EUR -
AED 3.886321
AFN 71.948894
ALL 98.933413
AMD 417.555685
ANG 1.908174
AOA 966.014859
ARS 1069.196247
AUD 1.622552
AWG 1.907164
AZN 1.802913
BAM 1.960444
BBD 2.137683
BDT 126.520885
BGN 1.955381
BHD 0.398821
BIF 3063.101743
BMD 1.058066
BND 1.41836
BOB 7.316053
BRL 6.320363
BSD 1.058768
BTN 89.555128
BWP 14.404848
BYN 3.464907
BYR 20738.098157
BZD 2.134074
CAD 1.481304
CDF 3037.708536
CHF 0.931949
CLF 0.037343
CLP 1030.398219
CNY 7.662559
CNH 7.670171
COP 4685.931988
CRC 538.054143
CUC 1.058066
CUP 28.038755
CVE 111.044468
CZK 25.264548
DJF 188.039947
DKK 7.458207
DOP 63.91131
DZD 141.106159
EGP 52.469615
ERN 15.870993
ETB 131.415925
FJD 2.392821
FKP 0.83515
GBP 0.830221
GEL 2.978499
GGP 0.83515
GHS 16.404106
GIP 0.83515
GMD 75.123079
GNF 9131.111962
GTQ 8.169428
GYD 221.506306
HKD 8.233322
HNL 26.66733
HRK 7.54746
HTG 138.753748
HUF 412.995403
IDR 16750.45814
ILS 3.843564
IMP 0.83515
INR 89.487437
IQD 1386.066765
IRR 44531.366598
ISK 145.304644
JEP 0.83515
JMD 166.815134
JOD 0.750279
JPY 158.328506
KES 137.023599
KGS 91.844168
KHR 4262.949222
KMF 494.064433
KPW 952.259208
KRW 1475.505509
KWD 0.325261
KYD 0.882261
KZT 547.06583
LAK 23219.263841
LBP 94802.734801
LKR 307.73183
LRD 189.60946
LSL 19.077338
LTL 3.124195
LVL 0.640014
LYD 5.163766
MAD 10.58282
MDL 19.375253
MGA 4967.621328
MKD 61.569113
MMK 3436.55785
MNT 3595.309001
MOP 8.488285
MRU 42.238405
MUR 49.147577
MVR 16.358104
MWK 1835.745278
MXN 21.542868
MYR 4.703145
MZN 67.621412
NAD 19.077333
NGN 1781.731031
NIO 38.940776
NOK 11.671836
NPR 143.289085
NZD 1.785615
OMR 0.407365
PAB 1.058768
PEN 3.971456
PGK 4.20423
PHP 61.994257
PKR 294.252135
PLN 4.296501
PYG 8268.977416
QAR 3.851894
RON 4.975878
RSD 116.953392
RUB 112.685171
RWF 1452.195904
SAR 3.975037
SBD 8.862925
SCR 15.966076
SDG 636.430728
SEK 11.527944
SGD 1.415908
SHP 0.83515
SLE 24.071399
SLL 22187.124874
SOS 604.688727
SRD 37.459417
STD 21899.834785
SVC 9.264031
SYP 2658.423001
SZL 19.077325
THB 36.323804
TJS 11.540199
TMT 3.703232
TND 3.324484
TOP 2.478101
TRY 36.707693
TTD 7.173721
TWD 34.328751
TZS 2793.295208
UAH 44.040199
UGX 3907.292098
USD 1.058066
UYU 45.359586
UZS 13622.603097
VES 50.309208
VND 26818.275762
VUV 125.615749
WST 2.953688
XAF 657.514449
XAG 0.034541
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.859477
XDR 0.809918
XOF 656.265966
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.943584
ZAR 19.103402
ZMK 9523.869567
ZMW 28.506445
ZWL 340.696895
  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.54

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    7.13

    +3.09%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    47.08

    +0.06%

  • BTI

    0.0000

    37.94

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.97

    0%

  • NGG

    0.3500

    63.68

    +0.55%

  • GSK

    -0.2000

    34.13

    -0.59%

  • RIO

    0.5200

    62.84

    +0.83%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    147.6

    +0.81%

  • BP

    0.1800

    29.31

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    0.2000

    13.61

    +1.47%

  • AZN

    0.4200

    67.62

    +0.62%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    27.03

    +0.04%

Rallies mark one month since Spain's catastrophic floods
Rallies mark one month since Spain's catastrophic floods / Photo: JOSE JORDAN - AFP

Rallies mark one month since Spain's catastrophic floods

Angry residents protested and lit candles in memory of victims on Friday as Spain marked one month since its worst floods in a generation killed 230 people.

Text size:

Outrage swept the country after the October 29 catastrophe wrecked homes and businesses leaving thousands of cars piled up in muddy streets in the eastern Valencia region.

Telephone alerts reached some residents when water was already raging through towns, while several municipalities went for days without state help and relied on volunteers for food, water and cleaning equipment.

Church bells rang out at dusk in Paiporta, the epicentre of the disaster, at around the time the floods began. Several hundred locals, some wearing face masks, gathered near a ravine which was ravaged by the torrential rain.

They left a line of candles on both sides of the ravine in memory of 45 people who died in Paiporta in the floods.

"This tribute is for them, we put a candle for them so they are not forgotten," said Bea Garcia, a 43-year-old teacher.

"The people continue to feel alone, the anger remains and there is also fatigue and frustration. We are all exhausted." she told AFP.

At 8:11 pm (1911 GMT), the time when Valencia regional authorities issued an alert more than 12 hours after a warning by the national weather service several people played alarms on their mobile phones and chanted slogans calling for regional leader Carlos Mazon to resign or be jailed.

Similar rallies were held in towns and cities across Valencia, organised by trade unions, associations and local organisations.

Another protest is expected in Spain's third city Valencia on Saturday. A first demonstration on November 9 drew 130,000 furious citizens demanding Mazon step down.

"We have to be extraordinarily understanding with the protests... there are still lots of people who have received nothing, so we cannot rest," Mazon told reporters on Friday, announcing the reopening of Valencia's metro on December 3.

Popular outrage boiled over in Paiporta on November 3 when residents hurled mud at King Felipe VI, Queen Letizia, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Mazon.

Sanchez and Mazon were escorted away and their fleeting unity has since collapsed, with the left-wing central government and the conservative regional administration trading blame for the handling of the floods.

- 'Swimming in mud' -

Thousands of troops, police, firefighters and volunteers continue to clear debris, repair damage and extract mud from garages, basements and car parks in the traumatised Valencia region.

"We are literally swimming in mud. The children are still out of school, things are going very slowly in the village, and we can't find solutions," Sabrina Bermejo, a 41-year-old laboratory analyst, told AFP at the rally in Paiporta as she held a candle.

Spain's Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo on Thursday reeled off a dizzying list of damaged property according to insurance data, including 69,000 homes, 125,000 vehicles and 12,500 businesses.

The government has scrambled to put together aid packages collectively worth 16.6 billion euros ($17.5 billion) in grants and loans to help stricken citizens.

But Amparo Peris expressed the despair of many in the flood epicentre who feel "abandoned" by politicians.

"We thank the volunteers, but we are very tired because this is not moving forward," the 35-year-old domestic assistant told AFP in Catarroja, where garages are still caked with mud and two piles of rusting cars greet visitors to the hard-hit town.

"This is horrific... I feel powerless because they (the authorities) do nothing," added Fina Solaz, 69, as she queued to collect essential goods.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)