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One dead, some 20 missing as storms lash southern France, Italy

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One person died and authorities listed some 20 as missing Saturday after heavy storms lashed southern France and northern Italy with hundreds of aid workers deployed to villages cut off by the deluge.

Italian civil protection officials said a 53-year-old volunteer firefighter died in the Aosta Valley as severe flooding hit the country's northwest after torrential rain overnight.

Regional authorities said 11 people were missing in the Piedmont region, where several villages were cut off after the downpour rendered roads impassable.

They said the situation was "extremely critical."

People view the Rialto bridge in Venice to watch an expected high tide
People view the Rialto bridge in Venice to watch an expected high tide "Alta Acqua" phenomenon
MIGUEL MEDINA, AFP

Authorities in Venice expected the city -- which also suffered violent storms in August -- to be submerged by an 'acqua alta', an occasional tidal peak coming in from the Adriatic to reach the Venetian Lagoon and flood as far as the iconic Saint Mark's Square.

But a complex network of 78 artificial dykes put up across the city kept the waters out.

- 'Historic day' -

The head of the Association of Saint Mark's Traders hailed a "historic day.

"Normally we would have been up to our knees in water," Claudio Vernier said.

The storms also affected the regions of Lombardy, Liguria, adjacent to areas of southeastern France where eight people were missing after the region around Nice suffered a sharp rise in water levels.

French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said a policeman earlier listed as missing in the village of Saint-Martin-Vesubie north of Nice and close to the Italian border had been found safe and well.

Local media showed how the rainfall had collapsed a main road around the village.

Darmanin was later due to visit the region accompanied by Prime Minister Jean Castex.

Map showing southern France  and the border area with Italy -- several villages were cut off in both...
Map showing southern France, and the border area with Italy -- several villages were cut off in both countries as rescuers searched for some 20 missing
Paz PIZARRO, AFP

"The situation is catastrophic in some communes," regional lawmaker Eric Ciotti told AFP as France's meteorological office said up to 500 mm of rain had fallen in some areas.

Friday had seen fierce winds drive heavy rain across large swathes of France, knocking out electricity for tens of thousands of homes along the western Atlantic coast and causing destructive flooding in the southeast.

An autumn storm baptised Alex buffeted Brittany overnight, with wind gusts reaching 186 km/h (115 mph) at Belle-Ile-en-Mer, an island off the coast near Nantes.

Authorities in the southern Alpes-Maritimes region had been placed on alert Friday and around 12,000 people in three valleys to the north of Nice were without power early Saturday afternoon.

"We are thunderstruck. We saw the (river) Vesubie burst its banks -- everything was swept away, including part of the old iron bridge," Serge Franco, an elderly resident of Roquebilliere in Nice's hinterland, told AFP as rescue helicopters hovered overhead.

"My house is habitable but half of my land has been swept away," said another resident, Guillaume Andre, who was evacuated overnight but returned to see the devastation after daybreak.

One person died and authorities listed some 20 as missing Saturday after heavy storms lashed southern France and northern Italy with hundreds of aid workers deployed to villages cut off by the deluge.

Italian civil protection officials said a 53-year-old volunteer firefighter died in the Aosta Valley as severe flooding hit the country’s northwest after torrential rain overnight.

Regional authorities said 11 people were missing in the Piedmont region, where several villages were cut off after the downpour rendered roads impassable.

They said the situation was “extremely critical.”

People view the Rialto bridge in Venice to watch an expected high tide

People view the Rialto bridge in Venice to watch an expected high tide “Alta Acqua” phenomenon
MIGUEL MEDINA, AFP

Authorities in Venice expected the city — which also suffered violent storms in August — to be submerged by an ‘acqua alta’, an occasional tidal peak coming in from the Adriatic to reach the Venetian Lagoon and flood as far as the iconic Saint Mark’s Square.

But a complex network of 78 artificial dykes put up across the city kept the waters out.

– ‘Historic day’ –

The head of the Association of Saint Mark’s Traders hailed a “historic day.

“Normally we would have been up to our knees in water,” Claudio Vernier said.

The storms also affected the regions of Lombardy, Liguria, adjacent to areas of southeastern France where eight people were missing after the region around Nice suffered a sharp rise in water levels.

French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said a policeman earlier listed as missing in the village of Saint-Martin-Vesubie north of Nice and close to the Italian border had been found safe and well.

Local media showed how the rainfall had collapsed a main road around the village.

Darmanin was later due to visit the region accompanied by Prime Minister Jean Castex.

Map showing southern France  and the border area with Italy -- several villages were cut off in both...

Map showing southern France, and the border area with Italy — several villages were cut off in both countries as rescuers searched for some 20 missing
Paz PIZARRO, AFP

“The situation is catastrophic in some communes,” regional lawmaker Eric Ciotti told AFP as France’s meteorological office said up to 500 mm of rain had fallen in some areas.

Friday had seen fierce winds drive heavy rain across large swathes of France, knocking out electricity for tens of thousands of homes along the western Atlantic coast and causing destructive flooding in the southeast.

An autumn storm baptised Alex buffeted Brittany overnight, with wind gusts reaching 186 km/h (115 mph) at Belle-Ile-en-Mer, an island off the coast near Nantes.

Authorities in the southern Alpes-Maritimes region had been placed on alert Friday and around 12,000 people in three valleys to the north of Nice were without power early Saturday afternoon.

“We are thunderstruck. We saw the (river) Vesubie burst its banks — everything was swept away, including part of the old iron bridge,” Serge Franco, an elderly resident of Roquebilliere in Nice’s hinterland, told AFP as rescue helicopters hovered overhead.

“My house is habitable but half of my land has been swept away,” said another resident, Guillaume Andre, who was evacuated overnight but returned to see the devastation after daybreak.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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