Balkans battle swollen rivers but relief in sight

Soldiers and volunteers battled floodwaters and evacuated people in southeastern Europe yesterday, but officials were optimistic the Danube and other rivers would retreat from record-high levels in coming days. Fed by rain and melting snow, swollen...

Soldiers and volunteers battled floodwaters and evacuated people in southeastern Europe yesterday, but officials were optimistic the Danube and other rivers would retreat from record-high levels in coming days.

Fed by rain and melting snow, swollen waterways swamped vast tracts of land in Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia and Hungary this week, driving over 10,000 people to higher ground.

In Hungary, 1,200 troops and as many volunteers worked through the night after cracks appeared in a dike protecting villages near the confluence of the Koros and Tisza rivers.

A day before the second round of Hungary's parliamentary election, Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany travelled to the area to persuade people to leave because of the cracks in the dike.

"I do not want to come back again here in the coming days, because if I do it will mean the situation has got worse," he said.

Officials began forcing 3,500 people to leave after many ignored an earlier order to evacuate. A team of 13 psychologists was also drafted in to talk the residents into moving out.

"We are Roma, 35 of us are hitting the road, the whole family, with children, grandchildren, and grandmothers," Gaspar Szalai told Nepszabadsag daily as he left the village Szeleveny.

Thousands of livestock and some 3,000 tonnes of grain were also moved out of the area.

Romania, the worst hit country, had to break through a major dike in the Danube delta to protect low-lying villages on Friday, but authorities now said the worst may be behind them.

"The forecasts are optimistic. The river will probably remain stable for another two days and then start to fall," said Elena Anghel, hydrologist at the National Hydrology Institute.

Europe's second-longest river, the Danube originates in Germany and flows through or forms borders with 10 countries before emptying into the Black Sea. It is the second time floods have ravished the region in a year. Last summer, swollen rivers killed scores of people and left thousands homeless.

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