The Telegraph 2024-11-03 12:16:43


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Flood survivor endured three days trapped in car next to dead relative




Rescuers have found a woman alive after she was trapped in a car with her dead sister-in-law for three days in their car following flash flooding in Spain. 

They pulled the unnamed woman to safety after hearing her cry out from a pile of stranded vehicles. 

Rescue teams are searching for more victims trapped in swamped garages and cars in Valencia during the storm, which has led to more than 200 deaths and left 2,000 missing. 

Martin Perez, the president of the regional Proteccion Civil, revealed the discovery to volunteers. He said: “After three days we’ve found a person alive in a car.” 

On Saturday, Spain’s government ordered the deployment of 10,000 soldiers and police officers to the Valencia flash flood disaster zone amid a row over control of the rescue effort.

Pedro Sánchez, the Socialist prime minister, called it the biggest peacetime deployment of military personnel in Spain’s history after admitting the response so far was “not enough”.

By Sunday, a total of 7,500 troops and more than 9,000 officers will be aiding in the efforts to locate bodies and survivors, as well as restoring order to destroyed towns and villages, some of which have been cut off from food, water and power for days.

Spain’s government has been frustrated by what it believes is the slow response to the disaster by Carlos Mazón, Valencia’s regional president from the conservative People’s Party (PP).

Despite the extent of the destruction and the loss of more than 200 lives in the region, Mr Mazón’s regional administration has kept its official emergency level at two on a scale of three.

If emergency level three was triggered, control over the relief and rescue effort would automatically fall to the Spanish government in Madrid.

Sources from Mr Sánchez’s government told The Telegraph that there was frustration at having to wait for Mr Mazón to request each increment in resources deployed.

“But we don’t expect a leader from the PP to hand control over to our administration,” a central government source said.

In a televised address on Saturday morning, Mr Sánchez said he was “aware” the response is not enough. “There are problems and severe shortages… towns buried by mud, desperate people searching for their relatives,” he said.

He then thanked Mr Mazón for asking for the boost in troop deployment before adding that there would be “time to review negligence [and] determine who was responsible” for any errors in the management of the crisis.

“Now is the time to forget our differences, to put ideological and regional sensibilities to one side and unite in our response,” Mr Sánchez added.

Mr Mazón’s regional government has been criticised for the late issue of an emergency flood alert, which finally came after 8pm on Tuesday, when fast-moving flood waters had already swept through settlements.

Amongst residents, the anger has been palpable, and trade unions called on Mr Mazón to resign on Friday as Valencia opened a temporary morgue to deal with the dead.

Valencia’s government has included officials from the national interior and territorial affairs ministries in its rescue coordination committee – but Mr Mazón retains ultimate control over what resources are requested and how they are managed.

“The central government is ready to help. Let them ask for more resources and they will be delivered,” Mr Sánchez said.

The prime minister also said that his government would create a fund to finance the reconstruction of the disaster zones in Valencia and other areas affected by heavy rain and flooding in Castilla-La Mancha and other regions.

Spain has approached the European Commission to seek financial assistance with the reconstruction effort, Mr Sánchez said.

Several European countries have offered to help Spain with the emergency, but Mr Sánchez’s government has so far refused all external help.

France’s interior ministry offered to send 250 firefighters to help in the search for survivors and the Portuguese government said it would send “whatever is needed” in the rescue and clean-up effort.

On Saturday, army commanders led the search for bodies in flooded tunnels and underground garages.

“Over three days we’ve been in several garages with five or six bodies in each. It takes a toll on young soldiers, of course it does,” a non-commissioned officer in Spain’s UME emergency military said.

“What I try to do is rotate them and their roles so the same person doesn’t find the next one,” the officer, who could not give his name due to military guidelines, told The Telegraph.

“We know we’re going to find bodies because when we get to a building with a garage, there is someone there saying my husband or my wife went to move the car and I didn’t see them again. They want answers and that’s natural,” he said.

Unknown numbers remain missing, with the local authorities denying reports that the figure could be as high as 2,000.

Speaking loudly over the screeching sound of a car being towed clear of the underpass, UME soldier Mario Villena shrugged off the impact of the bodies he had seen over recent days.

“It’s our job, full stop. There’s no way around it in a catastrophe such as this we’re seeing here,” he said.

Private Villena was joined by several soldiers currently off-duty but who had turned up to help out with the clearance operation, wearing civilian clothing with military motifs to differentiate themselves from UME personnel on duty.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Valencian volunteers continued to assist with the clean-up, taking emergency supplies to stricken towns and neighbourhoods.

Valencia’s regional government has banned private individuals’ cars from passing checkpoints on the edge of the flood zone and told volunteers to assemble at the city’s Ciudad de las Artes y Ciencias complex, from where they will be bussed to hard-hit locations.

Some motorways have reopened but local and regional roads resembled “Swiss cheese”, meaning certain places would probably remain inaccessible by land for weeks, the Transport Minister, Oscar Puente, told El Pais daily.

On Saturday, Diego Simeone, the manager of Atletico Madrid football club, criticised La Liga for going ahead with weekend fixtures.

“It’s clear that it makes no sense, what is happening is something that’s so hard,” Simeone told reporters before Atletico faced Las Palmas on Sunday.

“It’s emotional to see all the people going out into the streets to help … with whatever they can.

“There are people who are having a terrible time, it’s very sad, and we are in a place where they tell us to continue and here we are, continuing.”

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Trump accuses Washington Post of endorsing Kamala Harris by stealth




Donald Trump has accused the Washington Post of endorsing Kamala Harris by stealth in a formal complaint to the country’s top election watchdog.

The filing to the Federal Election Commission (FEC) on Thursday alleged the newspaper had paid to promote positive articles about Kamala Harris and negative Trump stories.

“The mainstream media has become nothing more than pro-Kamala propaganda,” the Trump campaign said in a statement.

The filing cited an article by the website Semafor that reported the paper was allegedly paying to boost its articles that were critical of the 78-year-old former president.

According to the six-page complaint to the FEC, the Washington Post, which for the first time in more than three decades declined to endorse a presidential candidate, had made “illegal in-kind contributions” to the Democrat’s campaign through its “online advertising efforts”.

The apparent backing was brought about through a “coordinated communications” strategy, the filing claims.

Trump’s filing is the latest in a string of FEC complaints made by his campaign which experts suggested were intended to garner media attention rather than secure formal penalties.

Bezos defends lack of endorsement

It comes after the Washington Post’s billionaire owner Jeff Bezos reportedly blocked the newspaper from endorsing a presidential candidate, ending a 36-year tradition.

Mr Bezos personally took the decision not to publish an editorial that had already been drafted by its leader writers backing Ms Harris, according to the Washington Post.

The Amazon founder later defended the decision and denied acting to protect his business interests, which include the potential procurement of government contracts, following the resignation of several staff and a dramatic drop in subscriber numbers.

“Presidential endorsements do nothing to tip the scales of an election,” Mr Bezos wrote in his own op-ed.

“What presidential endorsements actually do is create a perception of bias. A perception of non-independence. Ending them is a principled decision, and it’s the right one.”

In a statement on Friday, the Trump campaign claimed that while the Post “declined to endorse [Ms Harris] publicly, they have endorsed her in the dark”. “So much for ‘Democracy Dies in Darkness’,” it added, referencing the Post’s slogan.

In its complaint to the FEC, the Trump campaign cited the report by Semafor which noted that, like many outlets, the Post pays a small sum to promote its articles on social media platforms.

However, Semafor said that on Monday, the newspaper “aggressively ramped up its paid advertising campaign, boosting dozens of articles related to the election”.

“While the articles about Vice President Kamala Harris were relatively neutral in tone…the articles that the Post paid to highlight about Trump told a different story,” the Semafar story said.

The FEC reviews every complaint on a case-by-case basis.

If the agency finds that a violation has occurred, its responses can vary from written warnings to a fine, according to its website.

A Washington Post spokesman said: “As part of The Washington Post’s regular social media marketing strategy, promoted posts across social media platforms reflect high-performing content across all verticals and subjects. We believe allegations suggesting this routine media practice is improper are without merit.”

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