A resident walks through debris as heavy rain and flash floods hit Sant Llorenc de Cardassar on the island of Mallorca, Spain, October 10, 2018. REUTERS/Enrique Calvo |
At least 10 people including two Britons were killed as heavy rain and flash floods hit the Spanish island of Mallorca, authorities said on Wednesday.
Torrents of brown water swept cars along narrow streets in the eastern town of Sant Llorenc late on Tuesday. Rivers burst their banks, and swamped homes โ forcing some people to take shelter in a sports centre in the nearby town of Manacor.
A child is still missing, emergency services on the island โ which is popular with foreign tourists โ reported.
Two of the victims were British, a senior official from the San Llorenc mayorโs office, Antonia Bauza, told radio station Cadena Ser.
โItโs been a huge stormโฆ we realised that we could not control the water,โ she said. โThe situation is a disaster and weโre trying to locate survivors and help people but everything is flooded and people cannot leave their homes.โ
Residents swept water and mud out of houses as the floods subsided on Wednesday, leaving roadsides strewn with wrecked vehicles and beaches covered in debris.
Two men were found dead around midday on Wednesday, one in the northeastern town of Arta and another at Sโillot further south on the coast. A tenth victim was found later, emergency services said on Twitter.
The regional government called an emergency meeting, and authorities said 630 rescue workers and military units had been sent to the area to help.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez visited the rescue coordination centre, spoke to emergency workers, and offered condolences for the victims.
โThe most important thing right now is to find the missing people and respond to the concerns of their families and to everyone who lives near the affected areas,โ he told reporters. โWe will be there to support them at this difficult time.โ
Lawmakers held a minuteโs silence before the weekly prime ministerโs question time in parliament on Wednesday morning.