Sat, Feb 11 2012

Bulgarian president Purvanov sends condolences to Turkey over floods

Thu, Sep 10 2009 14:43 CET 2708 Views
Bulgarian president Purvanov sends condolences to Turkey over floods

An area of Istanbul affected by recent flash floods

President Georgi Purvanov has expressed his deep regret on behalf of the Bulgarian nation about the devastating floods in Turkey. He has also sent his Turkish counterpart, president Abdullah Gul, a message of condolence, a government press release has announced.
 
Purvanov stressed "his heartfelt regret for the loss experienced by the Turkish people affected by the disaster" and expressed his support on behalf of the Bulgarian people. He said that Bulgaria sincerely hopes that the situation in Turkey will be normalized as soon as possible.
 
Flash floods roared across a major highway and commercial district in Istanbul on September 10, killing dozens of people and forcing scores of people to scramble onto the roofs of cars and trucks to avoid raging torrents.
 
The sudden deadly floods were caused by relentless heavy rain that is expected to continue for several more days. Authorities report that such floods have not occurred for 80 years. Water levels rose up to 1.8m high in the city's Ikitelli district, cutting off the route to Istanbul's main airport and the highway to Greece and Bulgaria on the European side of the sprawling city.
 
According to reports from several media outlets, the Turkish government has pointed fingers at illegal construction in riverbeds in Istanbul for the heavy damage and casualties. "There is huge damage to infrastructure," said procurement minister Mustafa Demir. "We need to be more careful when designing infrastructure and cities," he told the Turkish Dogan news agency. 
 
Police units have been deployed in the worst affected areas to prevent looting in factories and shops affected by the floods.
 
A group of men were seen poaching rifles from an overturned cargo truck on a highway, according to private NTV television. Police soon arrived but some looters had already left.
 

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