European flood damage assessed

Cleanup, evacuations continue; death toll expected to climb

? Flood victims waded into their homes Wednesday to shovel out mud and cleanup crews cleared the debris from streets after heavy rains deluged central and southern Europe.

More than 250 residents from a submerged section of Bern, the Swiss capital, were evacuated by helicopter, and Romanian officials said seven people drowned overnight when waters surged into their homes.

The storms have killed 34 people across Europe this week, authorities said Wednesday, warning the number could climb as the missing are accounted for. Worst hit was Romania, with 25 dead and thousands of homes inundated. Austria, Bulgaria and Switzerland reported a total of nine dead.

In Germany, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder promised assistance for those affected by flooding in Bavaria, while authorities prepared for rising river levels downstream from the Alps. Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel also promised financial support for victims in his country.

Military helicopters airlifted tourists out of some of the hardest-hit areas in Austria, where streets had crumbled beside the swollen rivers. Parts of the western Austrian province of Vorarlberg remained cut off by closed roads, although sunny skies Wednesday and predictions of a break from the torrential downpour raised spirits.

The aerial view shows a flooded part of Neu-Ulm, southern Germany, on Wednesday. Rescue workers, some using helicopters, have evacuated hundreds of people from flood-stricken areas of Austria and southern Germany and built sandbag barriers along swollen rivers as heavy rains and landslides battered central and southern Europe.

“The situation is a bit better,” said Doris Ita, the head of Austria’s flood emergency department.

Hundreds of people were evacuated Tuesday following storms that sent muddy brown water surging along riverbanks in many regions, causing millions of dollars in damage.

In Austria’s alpine valleys, there was a deluge of mud. Train conductor Ernst Cavegn, 44, took a hammer and broke apart a waterlogged sofa before tossing it from a second-story window of his home, where water levels had risen as much as 15 feet.

“I grew up in this house. My parents built it when I was 3 years old, and now everything is destroyed,” he said. “My wife is in shock. She won’t say a word.”

In central Switzerland, water levels remained high. A number of towns still were half-submerged in water. The town of Engelberg was still isolated from the rest of Switzerland after its only road out was washed away by a landslide Tuesday.

“It is a huge catastrophe,” Walter Dietrich, a government official in the popular tourist destination of Interlaken, told the daily Basler Zeitung.