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Flood Deaths Are Rising In Germany, And Officials Blame Climate Change

Photos released by the Cologne district authority on Friday, and taken by the Rhein-Erft-Kreis district, show an entire section of a field having collapsed.
Rhein-Erft-Kreis District
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Storyful
Photos released by the Cologne district authority on Friday, and taken by the Rhein-Erft-Kreis district, show an entire section of a field having collapsed.

The worst flooding in decades to affect Germany and parts of Belgium has killed at least 120 people as search and rescue efforts for hundreds of missing continue, officials said.

Late Thursday, authorities said about 1,300 people were still unaccounted for in Germany, but cautioned that disrupted roads and telephone service could account for the high figure.

Meanwhile, German officials were quick to say that a warming climate is at least partially to blame for the catastrophic flooding.

Cars are covered in Hagen, Germany, on Thursday, with the debris brought by the flooding of a nearby river the night before.
Martin Meissner / AP
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AP
Cars are covered in Hagen, Germany, on Thursday, with the debris brought by the flooding of a nearby river the night before.

In response to news footage showing the massive destruction and desperate families perched on rooftops waiting to be rescued on Friday, Environment Minister Svenja Schulze said that "Climate Change has arrived in Germany."

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier expressed shock over the flooding and said that action needed to be taken to prevent future such catastrophes.

"Only if we take up the fight against climate change decisively, we will be able to prevent we will be able to keep extreme weather conditions such as those we are experiencing," Steinmeier in an address in Berlin on Friday.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is in Washington this week, said "heavy rain and flooding doesn't quite capture what has happened" in Germany.

People look at a destroyed railway crossing and damages caused by the floods of the Volme river on Thursday in Priorei near Hagen, western Germany.
Sascha Schuermann / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
People look at a destroyed railway crossing and damages caused by the floods of the Volme river on Thursday in Priorei near Hagen, western Germany.

"We don't know the death toll yet, but it's going to be high. Some died in their basements, some as firefighters trying to bring others to safety," she said.

Merkel, on her last U.S. visit as chancellor before a Sept. 26 election to replace her, met with President Biden at the White House on Thursday. Climate change was among the items on their agenda.

That meeting took place as regional governments in western Germany battled against the rain-triggered floods to rescue hundreds of people cut off by the raging water.

Nine residents of an assisted living facility for people with disabilities are among some 60 people dead in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Officials say the situation remains chaotic there and in North-Rhine Westphalia, where the city of Cologne is located, and that electricity and cellphone networks are down.

Destroyed houses are seen close to the Ahr river in Schuld, Germany, on Thursday.
Michael Probst / AP
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AP
Destroyed houses are seen close to the Ahr river in Schuld, Germany, on Thursday.
A destroyed bridge leads over the Ahr river in Schuld, Germany, in a photo taken on Thursday after the Ahr river dramatically breached its banks amid heavy rainfall.
Michael Probst / AP
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AP
A destroyed bridge leads over the Ahr river in Schuld, Germany, in a photo taken on Thursday after the Ahr river dramatically breached its banks amid heavy rainfall.

South of Cologne, police officer Patrick Reichelt told public broadcaster ARD that rescuers were barely able to manage to save children from a school because of the power of the floodwaters.

"The current of the water running past the elementary school is too strong for our motor boats," the officer said. "We just managed to get the kids out but that was the last trip we'll be making over that way today."

A woman tries to move in a flooded street following heavy rains in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.
Bruno Fahy / Belga/AFP via Getty Images
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Belga/AFP via Getty Images
A woman tries to move in a flooded street following heavy rains in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.
Cars are piled up by the water at a roundabout in the Belgian city of Verviers on Thursday after heavy rains and floods lashed Western Europe.
François Walschaerts / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
Cars are piled up by the water at a roundabout in the Belgian city of Verviers on Thursday after heavy rains and floods lashed Western Europe.

The governor of North Rhine-Westphalia, Armin Laschet, who is hoping to replace Merkel as chancellor, called an emergency Cabinet meeting Friday. His handling of the flooding crisis is seen as a test of his leadership.

In the town of Erftstadt, several people died after their houses collapsed due to a massive sinkhole, according to authorities.

"We managed to get 50 people out of their houses last night," Frank Rock, the head of the county administration, told broadcaster n-tv. "We know of 15 people who still need to be rescued."

"One has to assume that under the circumstances some people didn't manage to escape," he said.

Two men try to secure goods from next to the debris of houses destroyed by the floods in Schuld near Bad Neuenahr in western Germany on Thursday.
Bernd Lauter / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
Two men try to secure goods from next to the debris of houses destroyed by the floods in Schuld near Bad Neuenahr in western Germany on Thursday.

On Thursday, an entire district of the ancient city of Trier was evacuated, including a hospital and its patients, some of whom were just out of surgery.

Some of the worst damage has occurred in the wine region of Ahrweiler where entire villages have been cut off by torrents of floodwater. In the town of Schuld, houses collapsed and dozens of people were missing or unaccounted for.

People use rubber rafts in floodwaters after the Meuse River broke its banks during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.
Valentin Bianchi / AP
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AP
People use rubber rafts in floodwaters after the Meuse River broke its banks during heavy flooding in Liege, Belgium, on Thursday.

Meanwhile, in Belgium, the death toll rose to 12, with five people still missing, local authorities and media reports cited by The Associated Press said early Friday.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Houses stand in a flooded area in Schuld near Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany, on Thursday.
Bernd Lauter / AFP via Getty Images
Houses stand in a flooded area in Schuld near Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany, on Thursday.

Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.
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