sábado, 27 de febrero de 2010

RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 2 : Spain - Extreme Weather

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 2

Ref.no.: ST-20100226-25084-ESP

Situation Update No. 2
On 2010-02-28 at 04:11:30 [UTC]

Event: Extreme Weather
Location: Spain Northern areas Provinces of Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria and the Pyrénées


Number of Deads: 1 person(s)
Number of Evacuated: 1200 person(s)

Situation:

A 10-year-old boy was killed by a falling tree as he played football in northern Portugal, the country's civil protection service said on its website. It appealed to people in the country's northern and central coastal regions to stay home as winds gusted up to 140 kilometres (87 miles) an hour. A man was also killed by a falling tree in the French town of Luchon, in the southern Pyrenees region, police said. In Spain, an 82-year-old woman was killed when a wall collapsed on her in the town of Vilar de Barrio in the northwestern region of Galicia, regional authorities said. The powerful winds and heavy rains hit Spain's Canary Islands archipelago late on Friday, with gusts of up to 128 kilometres an hour reported, forcing the cancellation of about 20 flights, leaving some 10,000 homes without power but causing no major damage or casualties. The storm swept northeast into Galicia late on Saturday afternoon, where wind gusts reached 147 kph and some 27,000 households were without electricity, regional authorities said. Rail services were cancelled in Galicia as well as in the northern regions of Asturias, Cantabria, the Basque Country and parts of Castilla y Leon, where the storm left some 63,000 households without power.

Spanish meteorological agency Aemet placed all five regions under the alert level "red", the highest on its four-level scale. In the Basque Country, where power was cut to some 30,000 homes, a construction crane crashed onto a three-storey house in the town of Abaltzisketa, causing major damage but no casualties, regional authorities said. Aemet said the storm would be short but very violent and capable of causing serious damage. "This is a very deep, very intense and very fast-moving storm," Spanish Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said, warning people to avoid using their cars and taking mountain or sea walks. The storm developed in the Atlantic off the Portuguese island of Madeira, still reeling from the flash floods sparked by heavy rains that wrecked the centre of the capital Funchal and killed 42 people a week ago. The cost of the damage for the tourist island off northwest Africa is more than one billion euros (1.35 billion dollars), according to the head of the local government, Alberto Joao Jardim. Despite the violent winds, "the night was calm and normal", the Madeira fire service said, and traffic at the main airport on Saturday morning was unaffected.

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