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IRAN HIT BY 200-YEAR FLOODS
BBC News 13 August,
2001:
"More than 120 people are confirmed to have died in flash floods
which have swept through north-eastern Iran. Rescue workers are
searching for at least another 120 people who are missing in Golestan
and Khorasan provinces. Ten thousand people have been evacuated
to higher ground after three days of torrential rain, according
to local officials. The deputy governor of Golestan, the worst-hit
province, said more than 2,000 homes were damaged in the heaviest
flooding to hit the region for 200 years. Gas pipelines, electricity
and phone lines have been cut and over 80km (50 miles) of roads
have been destroyed, as well as thousands of hectares of farmland.
The cost of the damage has been put at over 200bn rials ($25mn).
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami has described the floods as a
huge disaster. Thousands of people have been evacuated to safety
Iranian Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mousavi and an envoy of Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei went to Golestan on Monday to supervise
relief efforts, Iranian radio reported. Army helicopters have been
transporting food and medicine to villages cut off by mudslides
and bulldozers are working to clear debris blocking roads. It is
feared the death toll could rise. "Considering the number of bodies
spotted but not yet retrieved from Golestan national park, the death
toll could be more than 200," health department official Reza Honarvar
told the Associated Press news agency. Knee-deep in mud Rescue workers
pulled bodies from the mud and stranded residents were evacuated
to hilltop shelters. With waters receding, some areas were still
knee-deep in mud. A resident of Kalaleh, one of the worst affected
towns, described the flood's onslaught. "When I walked out of the
house, I saw an ocean of water rumbling towards my house, breaking
trees and destroying power lines and bridges," Nematollah Dolqizadeh
told the Associated Press. And in Gonbad-e Kavus, tearful relatives
watched as rescue workers deposited bodies in a food freezer turned
into makeshift morgue. In Golestan National Park, a rescue pilot
spotted at least three tourist buses buried in the mud, one of them
upside down. At least 32 people were killed and dozens more injured
in floods in Khorasan province in May, after the worst drought in
30 years. "
WORST FLOODS IN IRAN IN 200 YEARS: 120 DEAD
13th August 2001:
10,000 people were evacuated in North East Iran, and 2,000 homes
were damaged in the heaviest flooding in 200 years. This follows
severe flooding in the affected areas just three months ago. Those
floods, the worst flooding in 30 years, killed 32 people.
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