Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Medical and Hospital News .




SHAKE AND BLOW
British PM warns of worsening floods crisis
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Feb 11, 2014


British PM cancels Middle East trip over floods
London (AFP) Feb 11, 2014 - British Prime Minister David Cameron said Tuesday he was cancelling a planned trip to Israel and the Palestinian territories next week to deal with devastating floods in England.

Cameron was due to make the trip on February 18 and 19 although it had not officially been announced for security reasons.

At a press conference about the floods that have affected huge swathes of southern England, the prime minister said he would continue to take personal command of the crisis.

"I will continue to lead the national response by chairing meetings of the government's emergency committee, Cobra. I'm cancelling my visit to the Middle East next week," he told reporters.

"I'm sending my apologies today to Prime Minister (Benjamin) Netanyahu and President (Mahmud) Abbas, but nothing is more important than dealing with these floods."

It would have been Cameron's first visit to Israel since he was elected in 2010, although the Conservative leader did visit while he was in opposition.

Prime Minister David Cameron warned Tuesday the British floods were likely going to get worse before they got better, pledging money was now no object to battling back the rising waters.

Cameron scrapped a previously unannounced trip to Israel and the Palestinian Territories next week in order to stay home and deal with the floods, as the government faced renewed criticism that it was under-prepared.

Troops were sent in to help deal with the worsening situation in southern England as hundreds of homes were swamped along the River Thames and rail services succumbed to the bad weather.

Affluent towns and villages along the Thames to the west of London have been transformed into lagoons.

More than 1,000 homes have been evacuated along the Thames, in villages and towns such as Wraysbury, Datchet and Chertsey and the situation was set to worsen with heavy rain and storms on the way by Friday.

"There is absolutely no sign of this threat abating, and with further rain and strong winds forecast throughout the week, things may get worse before they get better," Cameron told reporters at his Downing Street office.

"Money is no object in this relief effort. Whatever money is needed for it will be spent. We will take whatever steps are necessary," he said.

As for his planned Middle East trip, Cameron said he would instead continue to "lead the national response" by chairing the government's COBRA emergency committee.

He said he was sending his apologies to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, "but nothing is more important than dealing with these floods".

It would have been Cameron's first trip to the region since becoming prime minister in 2010.

Flooding first hit the largely rural southwestern county of Somerset but has now engulfed towns and village along the swollen Thames in the southeast, encroaching towards London.

A total of 1,600 troops have been deployed, and some were already at work filling sandbags in Wraysbury, where one resident had a bitter exchange with Defence Secretary Philip Hammond.

Su Burrows, a volunteer flood warden, said the relief effort had been left to residents like her and pleaded with Hammond for military help to distribute sandbags.

"I'm sorry, I am going to get emotional. There are 100 people of this village currently working together, none of them (Environment Agency) agents, not one," she told him in the exchange on Sky News television.

Burrows told AFP later that her blast seemed to have borne fruit, as 2,000 sandbags were sent to Wraysbury, followed soon afterwards by 100 soldiers.

Hammond earlier cautioned that government cannot "prevent the course of nature".

Insurers said overall claims had already exceeded �500 million ($825 million, 600 million euros) and the bill would rise fast.

Cameron said �2.4 billion ($3.9 billion, 2.9 billion euros) would be spent on flood defences between 2010 and 2014.

However, "when you have these extraordinary weather events, the wettest winter for 250 years, it is very difficult to have all the protections in place that you need".

Rail services have been disrupted, with those heading west from London's Paddington terminus among the worst affected.

In southwest England, nearly nearly three million tonnes of water are being pumped away from the submerged Somerset Levels every day -- enough to fill the Wembley national stadium three times over.

Andrew McKenzie, a hydrogeologist from the British Geological Survey, warned that some communities could be flooded for months due to high groundwater levels caused by the persistent heavy rain from mid-December onwards.

Underground layers of water-bearing rock, called aquifers, in southern England were half-full before the rainy spell began, and have since seen "spectacular" rises in groundwater levels, he said.

After the New Year downpours, there was still a lot of empty storage in the aquifers, but the prolonged rain "has just changed the situation totally".

He said he expected "many more months of groundwater issues".

.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SHAKE AND BLOW
Britain's River Thames on flood alert as blame game rages
London (AFP) Feb 10, 2014
Flooding in Britain spread along the River Thames and began to threaten London on Monday, as a political row over the handling of devastating winter storms erupted into the open. The Environment Agency issued 14 severe flood warnings - meaning lives are at risk - in the affluent counties of Surrey and Berkshire to the west of the capital, after the Thames broke its banks. Some areas ar ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Bottom-up insight into crowd dynamics

British flood victims angry at lack of help

With billboards, tweets, Philippines thanks world for typhoon aid

Floating school offers hope in Nigeria's 'slum on stilts'

SHAKE AND BLOW
Lockheed Martin Powers On Second GPS 3 Satellite In Production

India to launch three navigation satellites this year

NGC Wins Contract For GPS-Challenged Navigation and Geo-Registration Solution

20th Anniversary of Initial Operational Capability of the GPS Constellation

SHAKE AND BLOW
Dating is refined for the Atapuerca site where Homo antecessor appeared

Footprints found in British rocks said oldest ever outside of Africa

Experiments show human brain uses one code for space, time, distance

Researchers discover how brain regions work together, or alone

SHAKE AND BLOW
Social or Stinky? New study reveals how animal defenses evolve

US bans commercial ivory trade

New plant species a microcosm of biodiversity

Discovery opens up new areas of microbiology, evolutionary biology

SHAKE AND BLOW
January worst month in China's human H7N9 outbreak: govt

Vietnam reports second bird flu death in 2014

Chinese scientists sound warning over new bird flu

China reports three new H7N9 bird flu deaths

SHAKE AND BLOW
Execution with no farewell spotlights China death penalty

Top China filmmaker pays $1.2 million fine over children

The agony and ecstasy of Hong Kong's extreme runners

Chinese girl's 'cruel' New Year gala dance sparks controversy

SHAKE AND BLOW
French navy arrests pirates suspected of oil tanker attack

Mexican vigilantes accuse army of killing four

Gunmen kill two soldiers in troubled Mexican state

China smugglers dig tunnel into Hong Kong: media

SHAKE AND BLOW
Japan faced with gloomy data ahead of tax hike

Google becomes number two in market value

World's richest man would still pick up a $100 bill

China manufacturing index at six-month low: HSBC




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement