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Man's body found in Serbia as Balkans struggles with floods

Serbian state television says that a man's body has been pulled out of a swollen river in a southwestern town and rescuers are searching for another man as floods in the Balkans close down schools, cut railway traffic and soak homes and farmland

Via AP news wire
Friday 20 January 2023 10:26 GMT

A man's body has been pulled from a swollen river in southwestern Serbia and rescuers are searching for another man, state television said Friday as floods across the Balkans closed down schools, hampered traffic and soaked homes and farmland.

The floods this week in Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro, Albania and Kosovo have been triggered by heavy rainfall and unseasonably warm weather. Temperatures dropped in many areas on Friday as rain turned into snow.

The torrential rains were untypical for winter months. They have caused many small rivers and streams in the region to overflow, flooding the surrounding areas and forcing scores of people from their homes.

Authorities in seven municipalities and towns in southwestern and southern Serbia have declared an emergency situation as they struggle to contain the surging waters. In the town of Raska, authorities closed down children's day care centers and schools.

“This was stronger than all of us, we couldn't defend some parts,” senior official Nemanja Popovic said.

The body was recovered in Novi Pazar, where two men were swept away by the swollen waters of the Raska river on Thursday. Authorities said river levels dropped on Friday.

Heavy rainfall also has triggered landslides that cut off roads and a rail line connecting Serbia to neighboring Montenegro. Railway authorities said passengers will be transferred by buses for one part of their route.

Floods were also reported Friday in parts of Kosovo, where the Ibar river and other, smaller rivers and streams overflowed, endangering homes and cutting off local roads. Some areas in both Kosovo and southern Serbia were also left without drinking water.

Bosnian authorities said that after several days of flood alerts they expect the situation to calm as rains were succeeded by snowfall on Friday that also blanketed the capital, Sarajevo, along with Serbia's capital Belgrade and other regional cities for the first time this winter.

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