“Those people wouldn’t have died if they had been warned in time,” Laura Villaescusa, a neighbour and manager of a local supermarket, told Reuters.
Meteorologists said a year’s worth of rain fell in eight hours in parts of Valencia on Tuesday.
The floods have battered Valencia’s infrastructure, sweeping away bridges, roads and rail tracks and submerging farmland in a region that produces about two-thirds of the citrus fruit grown in Spain, a leading global exporter of oranges.
Thousands of people carrying bags or pushing shopping trolleys could be seen on Thursday crossing a pedestrian bridge over the Turia river from La Torre into Valencia city centre to stock up on essential supplies such as toilet paper and water.
Paiporta Mayor Maribel Albalat said they had never received warning of the imminent danger of flooding. She said 62 people had died in her town.
“We found a lot of elderly people inside their homes and people who went to get their cars. It was a trap,” she told TVE.
Clinging to pillar
In Godelleta, a town 37 kilometres west of Valencia city, Antonio Molina, 52, described how he survived a flash flood on Tuesday evening by clinging to a pillar on a neighbour’s porch with water up to his neck until the heavy rain finally subsided.
His dog was later found alive, swimming in the water, while his wife and son saved themselves by reaching the upper floor of their home.
Molina’s home had already suffered two major floods in 2018 and 2020, and he blamed authorities for allowing the construction of residential buildings in depressions where water accumulates.
“We don’t want to live here any more,” he said tearfully. “As soon as we get a couple of raindrops, we’re already checking our phones.”
About 80 kilometres of roads in the eastern region were seriously damaged or impassable, said Transport Minister Oscar Puente. Many were blocked by abandoned cars.
“Unfortunately, there are dead bodies in some vehicles,” Puente told reporters, adding that it would take two to three weeks to re-establish the high-speed train connection between Valencia and Madrid.
Visiting a rescue co-ordination centre near Valencia, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez urged people to stay at home due to the threat of more stormy weather.
“Right now, the most important thing is to safeguard as many lives as possible,” he told reporters.
In the hard-hit rural town of Utiel, about 85 kilometres inland, the Magro River burst its banks, sending up to three metres of water into the mostly single-storey homes.
Loading
Utiel’s Mayor Ricardo Gabaldon said at least six people had died in the town of about 12,000, most of them elderly or disabled people who were unable to clamber to safety.
Residents used water pumps carried on tractors as they started to clean up early on Thursday, with children helping to sweep the sidewalks. Ruined household appliances and furniture were piled up in the middle of roads and elderly people struggled to walk in the slippery, mud-coated streets.
Reuters
Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.