The Manila Times

SKorea’s capital area cleans up after rains

SEOUL: Cleanup and recovery efforts gained pace in South Korea’s greater capital region on Wednesday as skies cleared after two days of record-breaking rainfall that unleashed flash floods, damaged thousands of buildings and roads, and killed at least nine people.

While lifting heavy rain warnings for Seoul and neighboring metropolitan areas, the East Asian country’s weather agency forecasted 10 to 30 centimeters (4 to 12 inches) of rain in its southern regions through Thursday.

Seven people remain missing in Seoul and nearby Gyeonggi province following the heavy rains that swamped the region on Monday and Tuesday, turning streets into car-clogged rivers, sending floods cascading into subway stations, triggering landslides that crashed into roads and buildings, and displacing more than 1,800 people from their homes. The nine people who died included four who drowned in their homes in the capital.

During a disaster response meeting on Wednesday, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol apologized on behalf of the government for the deaths and disruption caused by the heavy rains.

He urged the central government to provide more financial help and personnel assistance to cities and regional governments to speed up recovery efforts.

He also called for significant improvements to flood management systems, including building more rain tanks and tunnels and improving flood-prediction technologies, citing the growing challenges posed by extreme weather events.

“It’s certainly true that [the rainfall] was abnormal weather, but we have come to a point where we can no longer call abnormal weather abnormal,” Yoon said. “We could see new record levels [of rain] at any time. We need to build our response so that we are ready for a situation that’s worse than we had imagined.”

Seoul’s Ministry of the Interior and Safety said workers through Wednesday afternoon had finished restoring more than 90 percent of some 2,800 buildings, homes, roads and other facilities in the capital area that had been prioritized in emergency recovery plans.

Nearly 3,000 government workers, including police and fire department personnel, and dozens of excavators and dump trucks have been deployed in the recovery efforts.

The military has separately deployed about 1,300 troops, some of whom were seen cleaning debris and salvaging furniture in flooded neighborhoods in southern Seoul.

There were no immediate reports of major damage or casualties in regions south of the capital area, where the weather agency issued heavy rain warnings. Landslide warnings were issued in more than 30 cities and towns across the country.

More than 52 cm (20 in) of rain was measured in Seoul’s hardest-hit Dongjak district from Monday to Wednesday noon. Precipitation in the area exceeded 14 cm (5.5 in) an hour at one point on Monday night — the highest hourly downpour measured in Seoul since 1942.

Asia And Oceania

en-ph

2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281947431625025

The Manila Times