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One dead and 40,000 French homes without power after winter storms

Much of southwestern France was on weather alert Saturday and 40,000 homes without power following gale-force winds and flooding that left one person dead, another missing and five injured.

One dead and 40,000 French homes without power after winter storms
A road sign reading " road closed " is pictured in a flooded neighbourhood following heavy rains in Peyrehorade, southwestern France, on December 14, 2019. Photo: Iroz Gaizka / AFP
The department of Pyrenees-Atlantique in the Basque Country was downgraded by the weather service Meteo France however from the maximum level red alert to orange.
   
A 70-year-old man died there Friday when his vehicle struck a tree that had fallen into the road during the storms.
   
Five others were injured, two seriously, when trees fell on their vehicles.
   
In Espeins in the Lot-et-Garonne region a man in his seventies was swept away by rising waters when he went out to fetch his mail and has been missing since.
   
Rescuers resumed searches on Saturday as floods inundated parts of the region with waters rising to up to nearly nine feet and by 30 centimetres per hour in some areas. Lot-et-Garonne was placed under red alert for floods.
 
A firefighter holds a teddy bear as he inspect a flooded neighbourhood following heavy rains in Peyrehorade, southwestern France. Photo: Iroz Gaizka / AFP   
 
A rugby rematch between Cardiff Blues and Pau for the European Challenge Cup in the city of Pau was initially cancelled but finally went ahead, ending with a victory for the French side.
   
Flooding and landslides cut off access to the skiing stations of Gourette and Artouste, while the distribution of drinkable water in the commune of Laruns was interrupted.
   
In the nearby Landes department, about 600 people were evacuated on Friday as a preventive measure in areas where the Gaves de Pau and Oloron rivers converge.
   
“We are getting used to this now,” a weary pensioner who gave his name as Christian told AFP. “We put everything on the upper levels, and we clear out everything from the garage,” he said.
   
But water levels were slowly falling in the area, local rescue force commander Olivier Loustau told AFP, and clean-up operations would probably start Sunday.
   
The Alps, where weather services had warned of heightened avalanche risk, were downgraded Saturday from the orange alert level, as was upper Corsica where winds had been packing speeds of up to 150 km/h.
  
French electricity utility Enedis said 40,000 houses were still without power in the late afternoon Saturday, primarily in southwestern France.

 
 

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STORMS

UPDATE: Death toll from storms in Switzerland rises to six

The death toll from flash floods that hit Switzerland after storms at the weekend rose to six Wednesday after a body was discovered in the southeastern canton of Ticino, police said.

UPDATE: Death toll from storms in Switzerland rises to six

The alpine region is experiencing its worst flooding since 2000 when 13 people were killed in a mudslide which destroyed the village of Gondo.

Police said the body was found in the Maggia river — the same area where another victim was discovered on Tuesday.

Emergency services had to use a helicopter to recover the remains.

The latest death brings the toll in the Ticino canton to five, making it the region hardest hit by the storms.

On Sunday, three German women in their 70s died after a torrential downpour triggered a landslide in the Italian-speaking canton.

In the neighbouring canton of Valais, where hundreds of people were evacuated as a result of overflowing rivers, a German man was found dead in a hotel basement in Saas-Grund.

Police said that he was probably taken by surprise by the rapid rise of the floodwater.

Scientists say climate change driven by human activity is increasing the severity, frequency and length of extreme weather events such as floods and storms.

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