At least 42
people have died with dozens more missing as one of the worst floods in years
hit western Germany on Wednesday. Among those worst affected was the town of
Mayen, where residents stood hapless, watching their houses, cars and other belongings being swept away
by the torrents.
“Nobody was
expecting this, where did all this rain come from? It’s crazy,” AFP quoted 65-year-old
Annemarie Mueller as she looked over her flooded garden from her balcony. “It
made such a loud noise and given how fast it came down we thought it would
break the door down.”
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The town of
Mayen, around 40 kilometres from Ahrweiler in the Eifel region – the hardest-hit
district – was inundated after the Nette river burst its banks and residents spent much of Wednesday
night trying to keep water at bay.
A number of
the residents continued pumping their basements on Thursday as there was still
no clarity on how long it will take before the water starts receding.
Even the local fire station was pumping its own basement, with exhausted firefighters sitting nearby, while others were busy clearing away uprooted trees.
Though locals were grateful they had not been as badly hit as other regions, where people have died and houses were washed away, they were still under shock.
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“We already had extreme floods in 2016, but these have been much worse,” said Uli Walsdorf, deputy head of the Mayen fire service.
“We were prepared, we had built up defences. But you can never be 100 percent prepared for events like this,” he said.
“We sat on the balcony and watched as the Nette overflowed. There was nothing more we could do,” pensioner Mueller said, describing how friends had come to help her rescue electrical appliances from the cellar in the night.
Andrea Schaer, 55, who lives nearby on the second floor of an apartment block, said residents in her building had clubbed together until 2:00 am to “save” the apartment on the ground floor.
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“We were lucky, the cellar is completely full and the water came up to four centimetres (1.6 inches) above the ground floor. It happened quickly, in 20 minutes the whole cellar was full, so I was a bit scared,” she said.
Local teacher Ortrud Meyer, 36, was waiting outside her home for an electrician after borrowing a pump to clear water from her flooded cellar.
The fire service wouldn’t be arriving for several hours as they had more urgent business to attend to, she said.
“We are aware of the danger, but we have never seen anything like this,” said Meyer, who has lived in Mayen for six years and does not keep valuables in her cellar.
“My father-in-law is almost 80, he’s from Mayen and says he’s never experienced anything like this,” she said.