City
Epaper

Death toll from Turkey's flash floods rises to 74

By ANI | Updated: August 17, 2021 07:05 IST

At least 74 people died and 47 others went missing in severe floods and mudslides in the Black Sea region of Turkey, the country's disaster agency said on Monday.

Open in App

At least 74 people died and 47 others went missing in severe floods and mudslides in the Black Sea region of Turkey, the country's disaster agency said on Monday.

Floods caused by heavy rain hit the Black Sea region in the north of the country on Aug. 11, leaving 62 dead in the province of Kastamonu. Eleven people died in the Sinop province and one in the Bartin province.

A total of 1,480 people from Kastamonu, 560 from Sinop and 341 others from Bartin were evacuated to safe areas, the agency added.

The Turkish defense ministry sent two ships to evacuate the disaster victims and vehicles from Sinop province.

Torrential rains caused flooding that demolished homes, collapsed bridges, swept away cars and cut power supplies in the region. (ANI/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: KastamonuSinop
Open in App

Related Stories

PoliticsTurkey's floods death toll rises to 81

PoliticsDeath toll from floods in Turkey reaches 62, dozens still missing

InternationalDeath toll from flooding, landslides in northern Turkey up to 31

PoliticsFlash floods kill 27 people in Turkey

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan fuelling religious extremism in Bangladesh to avenge 1971 defeat, claims Sindhi leader

InternationalBangladesh Home Affairs special assistant Khuda Baksh Chowdhury resigns after unrest over Hadi's killing

InternationalTrump sends Christmas greetings, including "Radical Left Scum"; touts about economy, national security

InternationalISI fans anti-India narrative in Bangladesh to rig Feb polls: Intelligence inputs

InternationalItalian PM Giorgia Meloni warns her staff that 2026 will be "much worse" than 2025