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Kazakhstan and Russia battle huge floods
Kazakhstan and Russia battle huge floods
by AFP Staff Writers
Astana, Kazakhstan (AFP) April 9, 2024

Water levels in overflowing rivers were still rising on Tuesday in swathes of Russia and Kazakhstan that have been hit by massive floods, with Russia's city of Orenburg and western Siberia bracing for a new peak.

Both Astana and Moscow have called the floods the worst in decades, introducing a state of emergency as water covered entire cities and villages.

More than 100,000 people have been evacuated from the rising water -- mostly in Kazakhstan.

The Kremlin said the situation remains "difficult" in large parts of Russia but insisted that President Vladimir Putin has -- so far -- no plans to visit the zone.

The neighbours have pledged to cooperate on battling the floods.

"Since the beginning of the floods, more than 86,000 people have been rescued and evacuated," the Kazakh government said on Tuesday.

It said that 8,472 of the evacuees were in temporary housing, with the rest believed to be in safe places in the community.

Kazakhstan also said it had taken 81,000 animals to safety. Five of the massive Central Asian country's 17 regions were affected, with around six rivers rising fast.

Russia said it had evacuated more than 6,500 people, mostly in the Orenburg region.

The Ural and Tobol rivers were rising fast -- threatening the regional hub of Orenburg and the western Siberian city of Kurgan.

The Orenburg region has been the most hard-hit Russian area, with the Ural river already flooding the city of Orsk almost entirely.

Orenburg is a city of 550,000 people near the Kazakh border and was bracing for the peak of the flood, expected on Wednesday.

Its mayor Sergei Salmin said sirens were ringing out across the city .

"It is not an exercise. It is a sign that the flood situation in Orenburg is extremely dangerous," he said, calling on residents of several districts to "not waste time" and prepare for an evacuation "in the nearest hours."

He said the river had risen to 914 centimetres, with experts saying 930 centimetres was the tipping point maximum level the city could take.

Salmin has said the city had not seen floods like this since 1947.

Russian media published images of it approaching the city's high-rise apartment blocks.

- Western Siberia braces for floods -

Russian Emergency Situations Minister Alexander Kurenkov visited the Orenburg and Kurgan regions, with his ministry publishing images of him flying over the flood zones, showing vast expanses of water stretching to the horizon and villages submerged.

Rivers were also swelling in Siberia's Kurgan and Tyumen regions.

Kurenkov then made his way to Kurgan, where he flew over a vast steppe showing a river getting wider.

In Kurgan, a city near Kazakhstan, authorities on Tuesday said that 689 people have been evacuated away from the overflowing Tobol river.

The mayoral office in Kurgan -- a city of around 300,000 people -- said the floods could reach the local airport.

In one village in the Kurgan region, Zverinogolovsk, the water levels of the Tobol river rose 74 centimetres in just two hours, Russian media reported.

Emergency services in Kurgan published a video of rescuers reaching villagers by boat.

- Putin 'not physically there' -

The Kremlin has said Putin has no plans to visit the zone but stressed that the floods are "at the centre of the president's attention".

The Russian leader has throughout his long rule shied away from difficult public meetings.

"Putin is not physically there but he is constantly in this topic," Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

"He works on these topics the whole day," he added, saying: "At the moment there is no plan for a trip to the region."

Small, rare protests erupted in flooded Orsk on Monday over the government's response to the disaster, with some residents calling on Putin to help with compensations.

Russia's exiled opposition slammed the official response and Putin's decision not to visit the affected zones.

"He doesn't even come to the place of the tragedy," Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, said on X.

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