OVIEDO (Spain), Nov 5 (Bernama-Anadolu) -- A week after historic floods devastated the province of Valencia, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced a massive aid package on Tuesday to assist affected residents and businesses in rebuilding and adapting to the changing climate, Anadolu Agency reported.
“Climate change kills, and we are witnessing it,” said Sanchez. “We will drive forward a transformation to adapt our territory to the climate emergency, which unfortunately affects our dear Mediterranean area.”
Last Tuesday, a strong storm system caused record-breaking rainfall that burst river banks inland, causing tsunami-like waters to flow rapidly toward the sea.
Emergency alerts arrived too late, and residents in most areas were caught off guard.
At least 217 bodies have been recovered, and authorities are still prioritising search and rescue missions.
The number of missing still has not been made public.
Nearly 15,000 military personnel and national police are on the ground working to find the missing, maintain security, and restore hygiene and basic services in the affected areas.
“There are still missing people we need to find, homes and businesses that have been destroyed – buried under mud – and many people are still severely lacking,” he admitted at a press conference.
Many of the financial measures announced Tuesday are recycled from the COVID-19 pandemic. Sanchez announced direct money transfers to affected homes and businesses, billions of euros of government-backed loans, and significant fiscal breaks.
Sanchez said insurance payments are expected to reach an unprecedented €3.5 billion (US$3.8 billion) and that 70,000 claims have already been made.
“Spain has always offered the European Union help when it was needed, but now, Spain is asking for help,” said Sanchez, announcing that the country has requested aid from the EU's Solidarity Fund.
The lack of prevention and slow clean-up efforts have been criticised by flood survivors and their families.
On Sunday, Sanchez, the president of Valencia, and Spain’s king and queen were attacked by an angry mob while visiting a hard-hit town. Mud and insults were hurled, Sanchez was struck, and an official vehicle was damaged.
While Sanchez acknowledged the legitimate anger of the residents, he said radical groups had flocked to the scene to “do as much damage as possible to the authorities who were there.”
“I’m fine, and they will not take my attention away from what matters — the affected citizens,” he added.
-- BERNAMA-ANADOLU
BERNAMA provides up-to-date authentic and comprehensive news and information which are disseminated via BERNAMA Wires; www.bernama.com; BERNAMA TV on Astro 502, unifi TV 631 and MYTV 121 channels and BERNAMA Radio on FM93.9 (Klang Valley), FM107.5 (Johor Bahru), FM107.9 (Kota Kinabalu) and FM100.9 (Kuching) frequencies.
Follow us on social media :
Facebook : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatv, @bernamaradio
Twitter : @bernama.com, @BernamaTV, @bernamaradio
Instagram : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatvofficial, @bernamaradioofficial
TikTok : @bernamaofficial