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At least five dead in floods in southern Germany as situation remains critical

A cormorant sits on a street lamp as the river Neckar has left its banks in Heidelberg, Germany, Monday, June 3, 2024.
A cormorant sits on a street lamp as the river Neckar has left its banks in Heidelberg, Germany, Monday, June 3, 2024. Copyright AP
Copyright AP
By Euronews with AP
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Persistent heavy rain led to widespread flooding in the southern states of Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttemberg over the weekend.

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The death toll in floods across a large part of southern Germany rose to five on Tuesday, after a woman's body has been recovered from a car that sank into floodwater in Bavaria.

Authorities warned water could rise further in the coming days.

The bodies of four people who died in the floods were found Sunday and Monday, three of them in inundated basements.

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.

A car washed away by floodwater rests on a well, in Rudersberg, Germany, Monday, June 3, 2024.
A car washed away by floodwater rests on a well, in Rudersberg, Germany, Monday, June 3, 2024. AP

Chancellor Olaf Scholz visited the flooded region on a trip to Reichertshofen, north of Munich, where he observed a sandbagged river bank and met regional officials, including Bavaria's Governor Markus Söder.

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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