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Wet weather causes havoc across Britain
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 23 - 07 - 2007


Emergency workers battled rising waters
Monday to rescue people trapped by floods that swallowed
large swaths of central England. Roads were submerged, and
tens of thousands of people were left without electricity
and drinking water, AP reported.
Torrential rains have plagued Britain over the past month
_ nearly 5 inches (12 centimeters) fell in some areas on
Friday alone _ and more downpours were expected until at
least Tuesday.
Officials said some rivers had yet to peak, and warned
that the western section of the River Thames _ some 80
miles (128 kilometers) from London _ was in danger of
bursting its banks.
London itself is protected by a series of flood defense
measures including the Jubilee River, a 7-mile-long
(12-kilometer-long) flood diversion channel.
«People look at me and say I look fine, but inside I'm
all churned up,» said Sylvia Williams, a 69-year-old widow
who was among about 50 elderly people evacuated to a
stadium from a retirement community overlooking the River
Ock on the outskirts of Oxford, 60 miles (100 kilometers)
west of London.
The stadium was stocked with blankets, food and bedding
for up to 1,500 people in case the Thames burst its banks.
Flood defenses in the center of Oxford _ home to the
renowned 800-year-old university _ were holding so far, but
Thames water levels in the city were not expected to peak
until midnight (2300 GMT), the Environment Agency said.
The worst-hit areas Monday were farther west, where cars
were submerged and streets turned into canals. Thousands of
people were forced to leave their homes and businesses.
The Ministry of Defense said military helicopters had
rescued more than 120 people from the rising floodwaters,
including 87 people trapped in a trailer park in
Gloucestershire county, central England.
The Severn Trent Water company said at least 350,000 homes
in Gloucestershire would be without water after flood
waters shut down a water treatment plant.
Some residents lined up for free water at local grocery
stores. Others waited for water trucks to distribute water.
Among the hardest hit areas was the medieval market town
of Tewkesbury, 110 miles (180 kilometers) northwest of
London, where the cathedral and a few blocks of nearby
houses stood like an atoll amid a vast stretch of muddy
water that measured 5 feet (1.5 meters) deep in places.
«It was just devastation _ total chaos, cars floating
past, rubbish, all kinds,» said John King, a 68-year-old
retired fire fighter from Tewkesbury. «You just can't stop
water of that power.»
The Ministry of Defense said water was being cleared after
flooding at a nuclear weapons-manufacturing site at
Burghfield, about 40 miles (60 kilometers) west of London.
Officials said there was no risk of a radiation leak.
No deaths or serious injuries have been reported in the
floods. The last time Britain saw similar flooding was in
1947, according to the Environment Agency.
«This emergency is far from over, and further flooding is
extremely likely,» Environment Secretary Hilary Benn told
legislators.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced increased funding
for flood and coastal defenses across the country during a
tour of the flooded Gloucestershire region.
Much of Britain's infrastructure dates back to Victorian
times.


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