Flooding across Russia's west from melting mountain snow and ice forces mass evacuations

Flooding across Russia’s west from melting mountain snow and ice forces mass evacuations

Moscow — Warm spring temperatures have unleashed torrents on parts of western Russia, where thawing ice and melting mountain snow are swelling some of Europe’s biggest rivers and inundating towns and cities along their paths. The southwest Russian city of Orenburg, near the Kazakh border, was bracing for its worst flooding in decades, while to the north, the entire region of Tyumen in western Siberia was put under a state of emergency as the flood risk mounted.

Officials have evacuated thousands of residents from homes along fast-rising rivers in the Urals and western Siberia.

Moscow declared a federal emergency Sunday amid the flooding in the Orenburg region, where the Ural river left much of the city of Orsk covered in water, forcing thousands to leave their homes. 

TOPSHOT-RUSSIA-FLOOD-DAM
Rescuers evacuate residents from the flooded part of the city of Orsk, in Russia’s Orenburg region, April 8, 2024.

ANATOLIY ZHDANOV/Kommersant Photo/AFP/Getty


The river was reaching dangerous levels Monday in the regional capital of Orenburg, a city of 550,000 people.

climate change for much of his rule, has in recent years ordered his government to do more to prepare Russia for extreme weather events. The country has seen severe floods and fires in recent springs and summers.

Salmin said authorities had evacuated 736 people in Orenburg as they expected the water to rise further.

Over the weekend he warned of forced evacuations if people did not cooperate, saying: “There is no time for convincing.”

Russia’s weather monitor Rosgidromet said it did not expect the flood in Orenburg to peak until Wednesday and warned that many districts of the city would be affected.

The Ural river flows through Orenburg and into Kazakhstan, where President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said the floods were one of the worst natural disasters to affect the area in decades.

More than 13 thousand evacuated due to flood in Kazakhstan
An aerial view provided by a Kazakhstan Ministry of Emergency Situations helicopter shows inundated areas as melting snow causes flooding, blocking transportation in 49 villages in Kazakhstan, April 1, 2024.

Kazakh Ministry of Emergency/Handout/Anadolu/Getty


Aerial images of the city of Orsk showed just the top floors and colourful roofs of houses visible over brown water. In the city center, water reached the first floor of buildings.

After evacuating more than 6,000 people across the Orenburg region, authorities also began relocating some residents of the Siberian city of Kurgan near northern Kazakhstan, home to around 300,000 people, where the Tobol river was expected to rise.

Emergency services in Kurgan said 571 people were moved away from areas expected to be flooded.

Authorities said around 100 rescuers had arrived as reinforcements in the western Siberian region from the Urals to prepare for the floods.

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Source: cbsnews.com

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