The Prague Post - Locals protest as Russian regions face worst flooding for decades

EUR -
AED 4.305746
AFN 79.567219
ALL 96.972658
AMD 446.540047
ANG 2.098395
AOA 1075.118068
ARS 1679.806084
AUD 1.760604
AWG 2.113305
AZN 1.978059
BAM 1.954233
BBD 2.351235
BDT 142.066087
BGN 1.955091
BHD 0.442077
BIF 3483.751202
BMD 1.17243
BND 1.500316
BOB 8.066532
BRL 6.319751
BSD 1.167369
BTN 103.218796
BWP 15.643657
BYN 3.951765
BYR 22979.626292
BZD 2.347837
CAD 1.623265
CDF 3363.119228
CHF 0.933981
CLF 0.028446
CLP 1115.922818
CNY 8.346118
CNH 8.34579
COP 4571.30423
CRC 588.435704
CUC 1.17243
CUP 31.069393
CVE 110.176188
CZK 24.353482
DJF 207.885085
DKK 7.464252
DOP 74.401295
DZD 152.096205
EGP 56.535037
ERN 17.586449
ETB 167.617544
FJD 2.622373
FKP 0.865489
GBP 0.864784
GEL 3.15414
GGP 0.865489
GHS 14.24152
GIP 0.865489
GMD 83.82747
GNF 10125.011021
GTQ 8.942791
GYD 244.234166
HKD 9.124424
HNL 30.579871
HRK 7.533686
HTG 152.869381
HUF 391.415322
IDR 19219.291832
ILS 3.895574
IMP 0.865489
INR 103.623344
IQD 1529.299852
IRR 49329.988659
ISK 143.188449
JEP 0.865489
JMD 186.91252
JOD 0.831291
JPY 172.873641
KES 151.055773
KGS 102.528776
KHR 4679.307867
KMF 491.837748
KPW 1055.175732
KRW 1628.042003
KWD 0.358002
KYD 0.972837
KZT 629.366093
LAK 25313.135025
LBP 104538.132578
LKR 352.323507
LRD 214.217321
LSL 20.487985
LTL 3.461881
LVL 0.709191
LYD 6.316989
MAD 10.540848
MDL 19.396365
MGA 5195.900258
MKD 61.490695
MMK 2461.616674
MNT 4216.819121
MOP 9.366549
MRU 46.391396
MUR 53.415587
MVR 18.061293
MWK 2024.302756
MXN 21.67694
MYR 4.937084
MZN 74.921254
NAD 20.488421
NGN 1760.192321
NIO 42.956106
NOK 11.577382
NPR 165.152689
NZD 1.963691
OMR 0.450799
PAB 1.167364
PEN 4.062143
PGK 4.948096
PHP 66.96214
PKR 331.367114
PLN 4.25425
PYG 8362.366146
QAR 4.25517
RON 5.071986
RSD 117.14217
RUB 99.070813
RWF 1691.565297
SAR 4.398524
SBD 9.641798
SCR 17.659999
SDG 705.210926
SEK 10.925036
SGD 1.503589
SHP 0.921346
SLE 27.417334
SLL 24585.266678
SOS 667.173577
SRD 46.630465
STD 24266.932069
STN 24.480684
SVC 10.214984
SYP 15243.7621
SZL 20.478841
THB 37.149032
TJS 11.072475
TMT 4.103505
TND 3.406954
TOP 2.745947
TRY 48.476485
TTD 7.928778
TWD 35.468112
TZS 2884.177233
UAH 48.250729
UGX 4097.714338
USD 1.17243
UYU 46.722337
UZS 14429.430079
VES 184.694725
VND 30934.56325
VUV 139.62861
WST 3.18421
XAF 655.439836
XAG 0.028002
XAU 0.000321
XCD 3.16855
XCG 2.103949
XDR 0.815157
XOF 655.437043
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.914814
ZAR 20.348283
ZMK 10553.27734
ZMW 27.812936
ZWL 377.521954
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.39

    +0.21%

  • SCS

    0.2800

    17

    +1.65%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    24.38

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    15.19

    +3.03%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    14.12

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    62.54

    +0.7%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    71.07

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    3.1400

    89.01

    +3.53%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • RELX

    1.2000

    46.33

    +2.59%

  • VOD

    0.2100

    11.86

    +1.77%

  • GSK

    0.9800

    41.48

    +2.36%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    57.31

    +1.83%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    81.1

    +0.36%

  • BP

    -0.2900

    34.47

    -0.84%

Locals protest as Russian regions face worst flooding for decades
Locals protest as Russian regions face worst flooding for decades / Photo: Handout - Russian Emergencies Ministry/AFP

Locals protest as Russian regions face worst flooding for decades

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.

Text size:

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.

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 protestors 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.

- 'Unprecedented' -

Orenburg Mayor Sergei Salmin told Russian television that the city "has not seen so much water" in decades.

"The highest (water) mark was in 1942. That was 946 centimetres," Salmin said.

"Since then there have been no floods. This is unprecedented."

Russia's weather monitor Rosgidromet said it did not expect the flood in Orenburg to peak until Wednesday.

The Ural river flows through Orenburg and into Kazakhstan, where President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said the floods were one of the worst natural disasters to affect his country in decades.

Emergency authorities also warned that the Irtysh river was "very likely" to flood parts of Tobolsk, one of Russia's oldest Siberian cities.

Putin, who has been a vocal climate sceptic for much of his rule, has in recent years ordered his government to do more to prepare Russia for extreme weather events.

The country has seen severe floods and fires in recent springs and summers.

F.Prochazka--TPP