A man looks at the Bormida river in Acqui Terme, Italy,
after torrential rains caused two nearby rivers to swallow
and flood various streets of this northern Italian city at
the weekend. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
The mayor of Naples ordered a much-awaited football match
scrapped on Sunday for fear tens of thousands of fans could be
trapped by flooding, while in northern Italy authorities
closely monitored the rain-swollen Po river.
Luigi De Magistris said he ordered the Serie A match between
Napoli and Juventus postponed to some later date, partly
because the field was already soggy, but mainly because of
concern some 65,000 fans could be trapped in flooding or
cause traffic problems as they drove to or from the stadium.
The sprawling outdoor ruins of ancient Pompeii on the
outskirts of Naples were temporarily closed for fear of
flooding, but later were reopened to tourists, authorities
said.
The area has been pounded by torrential rain that has already
claimed one life. Near the Naples suburb of Pozzuoli, a tree
fell on a car, killing the driver, local fire chief Giovanni
Fricano told Sky TG24.
Much of Italy, especially the northwest, has been pummelled
by heavy rains and flooding over the last two weeks. The
latest worry in the north concerned the Po river, the waters
of which swelled from two rain fed-tributaries, the head of
Italy's Civil Protection agency, Franco Gabrielli said. He
told reporters that Sunday evening could be a crucial time
for the Po's level, if the rain becomes heavier.
A bridge across a Po tributary, the Pellice stream, in the
countryside outside Turin, collapsed on Sunday as waters
rushed through, the Italian news agency ANSA said. No
injuries were reported.
Flash flooding in the centre of Genoa, on the Liguria sea,
killed six people on Friday (local time), including several
people who took shelter in a doorway along a major street
when flood waters came barreling down on them.
Elsewhere in northwestern Italy, hillside towns in the Cinque
Terre tourist area were still shovelling out from tonnes of
mud from earlier flooding that claimed nine lives in Liguria
and Tuscany.
Much of largely mountainous Italy is geologically fragile, as
people build homes on the slopes of hillsides, leaving them
vulnerable for mudslides.
In neighbouring France, 11 regions were on alert on Sunday
after heavy rains in the touristic Var and Alpes-Maritime
regions swelled rivers and left some towns under water,
forcing hundreds to evacuate.
According to the Var prefecture, at least 750 people were
evacuated from flooded areas in the coastal towns of Frejus,
Roquebrune and in Tourves, inland north of Toulon.
The heavy rain was marching westward toward the Atlantic,
putting the Pyrenees region on alert.
At least one flood-related death has been reported in France.
The body of a man was found on Saturday morning on a
riverbank in Lezignan-la-Cebe in the Herault region.
Officials there said the victim was likely a homeless German
who lived in a van and was reported missing Friday.
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