MOSCOW: Russia on Monday warned of “unprecedented” flooding over the next 48 hours as locals in a city partially submerged by rising waters took to the streets in rare protest at the authorities’ handling of the crisis.
Fast-melting ice and torrential rain have caused major rivers — the Ural and Tobol — near the Russian border with Kazakhstan to overflow, with officials warning the flood waters are set to rise dangerously high over the next 48 hours.
Dozens of protestors in the city of Orsk, which was submerged in metres of flood water over the weekend after a dam burst, on Monday protested against the government’s weak response in a rare show of dissent in Russia.
Videos posted by local social media channels showed the crowds shouting, “Shame! Shame! Shame!” and “Putin, help!” The Kremlin earlier on Monday said that the Russian president had no plans to visit the flooded areas. Public demonstrations against the government are illegal in Russia under strict anti-protest laws.
Record floods in Urals triggered by melting snow
The Orenburg regional prosecutor’s office, which covers Orsk, explicitly on Monday warned residents that they faced arrest if they participated in “unauthorised” rallies.
The protesters were demanding more financial help and were angry that a dam designed to protect the city had burst.
In a compensation scheme published over the weekend, the regional government said it would pay up to 100,000 roubles ($1,100) per person for household items “completely destroyed” in the floods. The Orenburg governor on Monday said that it would fully reimburse the cost of damage to housing, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported.
‘Do not wait’
In Orsk, the worst affected city so far, 99 people were treated for injuries with nine people admitted to hospital, state media cited health officials as saying. More cities, including the regional hub of Orenburg with a population of 550,000, were bracing for a surge in water levels over the coming days. Governors in the neighbouring
regions of Kurgan and Tyumen each introduced a state of emergency.
“The flood forecast is rapidly deteriorating, much more water is arriving, and faster,” Vadim Shumkov, the governor of the Kurgan region said in a post on Telegram. He called on people to evacuate while they still could.
“Everyone who lives in settlements along the floodplain of the Tobol River: evacuate. Do not wait for the water to come. It will come at night and unexpectedly, quickly arriving in the form of a large wave,” Shumkov said in a post on Telegram.
The regional capital, also called Kurgan, is home to 300,000 people and sits on the river.
Water levels were receding in Orsk on Monday but had risen close to dangerous levels in the city of Orenburg. The Kremlin called the situation “critical” and said it would likely “worsen”.
“Nature has caused a lot of inconvenience. But the local residents are handling it stoically, as are the local authorities,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, hours before the protests in Orsk. Thousands of people have been evacuated from flooded areas.
The Emergency Situations ministry on Monday said that more than 10,000 residential buildings had been flooded, mostly in the Urals, Volga area and western Siberia.
Published in Dawn, April 9th, 2024
Dear visitor, the comments section is undergoing an overhaul and will return soon.