Shropshire Star

Storm eases in Greece but flood risk remains high amid rising river levels

The city of Volos was devastated by Storm Elias.

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Sunken car

Bad weather has eased in central Greece, leaving widespread flooding and infrastructure damage across a farming region which has been battered by two powerful storms in less than a month.

Municipal workers were handing out bottled water in the storm-hit city of Volos, where power and water outages remained in some districts for a third day, while rescue crews used excavators to clear debris-strewn roads blocking access to remote nearby areas.

The two storms, Daniel and Elias, struck central Greece and the island of Evia over three weeks in September, killing several hundred thousand farm animals and damaging motorways, secondary roads and the rail network.

Flood damage
A man clears mud water from the yard of his house following floods at the town of Agria near the city of Volos (AP)

Despite the improving weather, the risk of additional flooding remains high in several central cities and towns as river banks remain vulnerable to high water levels, authorities said.

The government said more than two billion euro (£1.7 billion) in damages had been caused before the latest storm hit. It has promised residents emergency aid while seeking financial assistance from the European Union.

The search for a missing pilot continued on Friday, a day after a helicopter flying in the bad weather went missing.

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