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Heaviest rains in 80 years kill 31 in Turkey
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-09-10 03:46

ISTANBUL: Flash floods killed 31 people in northwest Turkey, sweeping through the city of Istanbul, swamping houses, turning highways into fast-flowing rivers and drowning seven women in a minibus that was taking them to work.

Heaviest rains in 80 years kill 31 in Turkey

Rescue workers evacuate passengers who were trapped in a bus in Ikitelli, Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009. [Agencies]
Heaviest rains in 80 years kill 31 in Turkey

Twenty-four died in Istanbul, Turkey's largest city, after two days of the heaviest rain in 80 years produced sudden flood waters which engulfed low-lying areas. Another seven died in Saray, west of Istanbul, five of whom were from the same family.

In Istanbul rescue workers, some on boats, put out planks and ladders to help drivers, stranded in fast-flowing waters, reach the safety of bridges and high land.

The worst flooding occurred in areas in the west of the city, on the European side, where drainage is often poor.

The waters began to recede late on Wednesday revealing wrecked buildings and debris scattered across the streets, as distressed residents started the clean-up.

Interior Minister Besir Atalay said the death toll could rise as waters continued to recede.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, a native of Istanbul, arrived in the city on Wednesday night, and pledged emergency relief, saying the damage would be repaired as soon as possible.

Witnesses said waves of muddy waters pulling cars, trees and debris crashed into homes and buildings early on Wednesday as people were getting up to break their fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.

Heaviest rains in 80 years kill 31 in Turkey

A man on a partially submerged bus waits for evacuation on a highway in Istanbul September 9, 2009. [Agencies]Heaviest rains in 80 years kill 31 in Turkey

"We heard a crashing sound and then saw the waters coming down carrying cars and debris," said Nuri Bitken, a 42-year-old night guard at a truck garage.

"We tried to wake up those who were still asleep in the trucks but some didn't make it. The dead had to be retrieved by boats," Bitken told Reuters.

CNN Turk television showed scenes of white blankets covering the bodies of people found in the western Halkali neighborhood near Ataturk International airport. Airport officials said there was no disruption to flights.

"My friend got stuck in the truck after the water rose all at once. The vehicle stopped working after filling with water. We rescued him with a winch," Kamil Coskun told Reuters TV in the Ikitelli district.

Istanbul's ancient district of Sultanahmet, with its mosques, the palaces of the waterfront and Beyoglu's area of narrow streets were largely unaffected.

In the Ikitelli commercial district, residents scrambled for office equipment amid debris. In other parts of the city, people waded chest-high through swamped highways.

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