Italy floods: F1 Imola race cancelled as deadly
deluge sparks evacuations in Emilia-Romagna
Published
15 hours
ago
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-65620597
By Jaroslav
Lukiv
BBC News
Nine people have been killed and several are missing
after heavy rains caused flooding in Italy's northern Emilia-Romagna region,
officials say.
About
10,000 people have been evacuated, and some had to be rescued from roofs by
helicopter.
The
authorities say 14 rivers have broken their banks, flooding 23 towns. The mayor
of Ravenna says his city is now "unrecognisable".
The
Emilia-Romagna F1 Grand Prix this weekend has now been cancelled.
Discussions
on Wednesday between local authorities and organisers of the race at Imola
concluded that the event could not go ahead.
Further
rain is expected in the region over the coming days.
"It's
probably been the worst night in the history of Romagna," Ravenna Mayor
Michele de Pascale told Italy's RAI public broadcaster. "Ravenna is
unrecognisable for the damage it has suffered."
The mayor
of nearby Forli, Gian Luca Zattini, said his city was "on its knees,
devastated and in pain", AFP news agency reported.
In the city
of Cesena, residents climbed on the rooftops and waited to be rescued by
helicopter or boat.
In Castel
Bolognese, the mayor said the situation was "catastrophic", the BBC's
Sofia Bettiza in Italy reports. Thousands of people living in single-floor
homes needed to be rescued, the mayor added.
There is
currently no electricity in the town, our correspondent adds. People are
sheltering in gyms and schools across Emilia-Romagna.
Confirming
nine people had died in the flooding on Wednesday, Regional President Stefano
Bonaccini said there had been hundreds of landslides leading to roads in the
region being cut off.
In an
earlier Facebook post, he urged residents not go near the rivers and advised
people who live in nearby them to move to higher floors.
Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni chaired a crisis meeting with civil protection
officials and later thanked rescuers who had risked their own lives to help the
victims.
Teams of
volunteers have arrived to assist local emergency services on the ground in the
Emilia-Romagna region.
In some
areas it has not been possible to gauge the rainfall, because the amount
exceeded what their instruments could record.
Northern
Italy has gone from severe drought to flooding rain, with the latest deluge
caused by Storm Minerva, BBC Weather Presenter Chris Fawkes said.
"This
area was also hit with torrential rain at the start of the month leading to
flooding, and this will have left saturated soils, less able to soak up this
latest round of heavy rain," he added.
"It's
in stark contrast to the state of emergency declared by the Italian authorities
last year due to ongoing severe drought. Further thundery downpours are
expected for Italy over the next couple of weeks."



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