At least 16 people were killed in violent storms and flooding that struck the French Riviera overnight, with three people still missing, French President Francois Hollande said yesterday.
The president visited the site of the disaster, which occurred when the Cote d’Azur was lashed by to 180mm of rain in only three hours.
“The toll is not yet final. In these moments, we must be fast, efficient and coordinated,” Hollande said.
Three people died when water engulfed a retirement home at Biot, near Antibes, and three drowned when their car was trapped by rising waters in a small tunnel at Vallauris-Golfe-Juan.
Other fatalities were reported in Antibes and Cannes.
Rescue teams at Mandelieu-la-Napoule said the water was so murky that they could not see the bodies trapped in underground car parks, where at least seven people died.
“It’s apocalyptic,” Mandelieu-la-Napoule Mayor Henri Leroy said. “The parking was half-emptied, but there are thousands of vehicles. There could be more bodies.”
Firetrucks were busy sucking water out of underground parking lots and basements.
“I saw water pour in from the veranda. Within five minutes, it was up to my waist,” said one retired resident, France Oberlin, still in shock. “I couldn’t open the doors, but luckily a neighbor came.”
Sitting on a plastic chair, surrounded by debris and overturned cars, she looked despairingly at her ground-floor apartment, in which everything had been destroyed.
Water coursed through Cannes, Nice and Antibes, transforming the streets of three of France’s most glamorous cities into debris-strewn rivers.
“Some cars were carried off into the sea,” Cannes Mayor Davis Lisnard said, adding that water levels reached halfway up car doors and trees were left uprooted on the city’s main avenue.
Cannes provided emergency shelter for 120 people, Lisnard said.
“We have rescued a lot of people, and we must now be vigilant against looting,” he added.
Hollande issued a message thanking rescuers and local officials and expressed the “solidarity of the nation” to those who had been affected.
About 27,000 homes remained without power yesterday, 14,000 of them in Cannes alone.
Communications to the region — one of the wealthiest in France, and a magnet for visitors from around the world — were badly hit.
About 500 people, many of them British and Danish tourists, were stranded at Nice airport.
About a dozen trains were halted at local stations. The state rail company SNCF provided food and blankets to hundreds of passengers who were stuck aboard.
The A8 motorway near Antibes was flooded when a small river, the Brague, burst its banks.
The game between OGC Nice and Nantes in France’s Ligue 1 soccer division was called off in the 46th minute after the pitch became a quagmire.
Nice’s mayor’s office estimated the city had received 10 percent of its average annual rainfall in the past two days alone.
By dawn, the worst storms had passed over France and were headed for the Italian coast, Meteo-France said.
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