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NewsJuly 24, 2007

TEWKESBURY, England -- Emergency workers rescued hundreds of trapped people Monday as water swallowed swaths of central England in the worst flooding to hit the country for 60 years. Officials said some rivers were still rising, with the western section of the rain-swollen River Thames on the verge of bursting its banks...

By KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH ~ The Associated Press
A man sat Monday on a partly submerged bench on the bank of River Thames at Pangbourne, England, which has overflowed with water from the heavy rainfall in Central and western England that flooded many areas. A flood warning along some parts of River Thames was in force. (SANG TAN ~ Associated Press)
A man sat Monday on a partly submerged bench on the bank of River Thames at Pangbourne, England, which has overflowed with water from the heavy rainfall in Central and western England that flooded many areas. A flood warning along some parts of River Thames was in force. (SANG TAN ~ Associated Press)

TEWKESBURY, England -- Emergency workers rescued hundreds of trapped people Monday as water swallowed swaths of central England in the worst flooding to hit the country for 60 years. Officials said some rivers were still rising, with the western section of the rain-swollen River Thames on the verge of bursting its banks.

Roads and parking lots were submerged, trains suspended, buses canceled. Hundreds of thousands of people were without electricity or drinking water, and farmers saw their summer crops destroyed.

Torrential rains have plagued Britain over the past month -- nearly 5 inches fell in some areas on Friday alone -- and more downpours were predicted this week.

"This emergency is far from over and further flooding is extremely likely," Environment Secretary Hilary Benn told lawmakers in the House of Commons.

Late Monday, waters peaked on the swollen River Severn, which had flooded parts of the city of Gloucester and nearby areas of west-central England.

"If it goes up another couple of inches, Gloucester is in trouble, but it seems to have peaked. ... We're winning," said Environment Agency spokesman Adrian Westwood.

On the outskirts of Oxford, 60 miles west of London, about 50 elderly people were evacuated to a stadium from a retirement community overlooking the swollen River Ock.

The stadium was stocked with blankets, food and bedding for up to 1,500 people in case the Thames burst its banks. Flood defenses in the center of the town -- home to the renowned 800-year-old university -- were holding so far, but Thames water levels were not expected to peak until midnight.

The worst-hit areas Monday were farther west, where cars were submerged and streets turned into canals. Thousands of people were forced to leave their homes and businesses, as rescue workers in helicopters and dinghies scooped stranded residents onto dry land.

The Ministry of Defense said military helicopters rescued more than 120 people from the rising floodwaters.

Among the hardest hit areas was the medieval market town of Tewkesbury, 110 miles northwest of London, where the cathedral and a few blocks of nearby houses stood like an atoll in a vast stretch of muddy water that stood 5 feet deep in places.

"It was just devastation -- total chaos, cars floating past, rubbish, all kinds," said John King, a 68-year-old retired firefighter from Tewkesbury. "You just can't stop water of that power."

He said he saw goldfish swimming in his driveway.

Some residents lined up for free water at local grocery stores, while others took to canoes and small boats to ferry food and water to housebound residents.

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The last time Britain saw similar flooding was in 1947, according to the Environment Agency. No deaths or serious injuries have been reported in the current flooding.

The Severn Trent Water company said at least 350,000 homes in Gloucestershire, in western England, were without water after flooding shut down a water treatment plant.

Tens of thousands were without electricity, and Benn said 200,000 properties could lose power if an electrical substation at Walham, near Gloucester, is inundated by the River Severn. Workers and Royal Navy sailors piled sandbags around the station in an attempt to hold back the water. Westwood said late Monday that with the Severn at its peak, it appeared the defenses would hold.

The Ministry of Defense said water was being cleared after flooding at a nuclear weapons-manufacturing site at Burghfield, about 40 miles west of London. Officials said there was no risk of a radiation leak.

London itself was not affected. The city is protected from flooding in the east by the Thames Barrier, the world's largest moveable flood defense, which closes to seal off part of the upper Thames from the sea.

To the west, London is protected by several flood defense measures including the Jubilee River, a 7-mile-long diversion channel. The western section of the Thames that officials worried about lies 80 miles from the capital.

During a tour of the Gloucestershire region, Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced increased funding for flood and coastal defenses across the country.

"It is pretty clear that some of the 19th-century structures and infrastructure and where they were sited is something we will have to review," said Brown, who succeeded Tony Blair less than a month ago. Much of Britain's infrastructure dates to Victorian times.

Insurance companies said the damage from flooding in June and July could reach hundreds of millions of dollars.

The British weather was consistent with conditions caused by the La Nina weather system, which is caused by cooling ocean waters and leads to extreme weather, Britain's Meteorology Office said. However, scientists said there was no clear explanation for the unusually long spell of wet weather.

"The situation is looking critical at the moment. Unfortunately the misery is set to continue," said Environment Agency spokesman Joe Giacomelli.

Climate change may be culprit, said Tim Evans of the Chartered Institution of Water and Environment Management, adding that the situation matched predictions of how global warning would affect Britain.

Britain had one of its hottest and driest summers on record last year.

"What we now think of as extreme events will occur more often than in the past, and the extremes will get more extreme," Evans said.

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