Zürcher Nachrichten - In western Germany, 'temporary' life a year after flood

EUR -
AED 3.883184
AFN 71.818995
ALL 98.529288
AMD 409.074731
ANG 1.904933
AOA 965.269565
ARS 1055.823448
AUD 1.634055
AWG 1.905693
AZN 1.796736
BAM 1.963349
BBD 2.134105
BDT 126.305615
BGN 1.958873
BHD 0.398489
BIF 3120.889138
BMD 1.05725
BND 1.422327
BOB 7.303079
BRL 6.131332
BSD 1.056969
BTN 89.210716
BWP 14.508852
BYN 3.458999
BYR 20722.097605
BZD 2.130491
CAD 1.485092
CDF 3030.077547
CHF 0.937997
CLF 0.03738
CLP 1031.432166
CNY 7.640849
CNH 7.64702
COP 4738.32964
CRC 539.855192
CUC 1.05725
CUP 28.017122
CVE 110.690579
CZK 25.29164
DJF 188.214531
DKK 7.458121
DOP 63.924566
DZD 141.122754
EGP 52.181994
ERN 15.858748
ETB 131.016949
FJD 2.405085
FKP 0.834505
GBP 0.834519
GEL 2.880977
GGP 0.834505
GHS 16.990324
GIP 0.834505
GMD 75.065022
GNF 9109.160997
GTQ 8.162421
GYD 221.130194
HKD 8.230264
HNL 26.688738
HRK 7.541637
HTG 138.870131
HUF 405.584277
IDR 16826.501842
ILS 3.956134
IMP 0.834505
INR 89.26366
IQD 1384.623553
IRR 44515.505624
ISK 145.69996
JEP 0.834505
JMD 167.324113
JOD 0.749692
JPY 164.496462
KES 136.886677
KGS 91.321543
KHR 4293.07952
KMF 493.206073
KPW 951.524489
KRW 1474.720869
KWD 0.325147
KYD 0.880786
KZT 524.014714
LAK 23219.272657
LBP 94650.007075
LKR 308.797253
LRD 195.010693
LSL 19.346784
LTL 3.121784
LVL 0.639519
LYD 5.162874
MAD 10.556688
MDL 19.146614
MGA 4952.06294
MKD 61.70838
MMK 3433.906362
MNT 3592.535028
MOP 8.473177
MRU 42.017959
MUR 49.797328
MVR 16.34494
MWK 1832.755181
MXN 21.55262
MYR 4.723842
MZN 67.505419
NAD 19.346784
NGN 1766.040983
NIO 38.896051
NOK 11.755846
NPR 142.737467
NZD 1.800616
OMR 0.40705
PAB 1.056964
PEN 4.027485
PGK 4.187685
PHP 62.042588
PKR 293.569595
PLN 4.320912
PYG 8254.73753
QAR 3.853133
RON 4.976157
RSD 117.002695
RUB 105.775886
RWF 1451.186334
SAR 3.970856
SBD 8.863332
SCR 14.534817
SDG 635.944564
SEK 11.598634
SGD 1.418147
SHP 0.834505
SLE 23.97847
SLL 22170.006319
SOS 604.025192
SRD 37.380653
STD 21882.937891
SVC 9.248559
SYP 2656.371886
SZL 19.354505
THB 36.781198
TJS 11.267173
TMT 3.700375
TND 3.338251
TOP 2.47618
TRY 36.395568
TTD 7.176592
TWD 34.334401
TZS 2812.28442
UAH 43.573034
UGX 3878.913513
USD 1.05725
UYU 44.902853
UZS 13537.046769
VES 48.066111
VND 26838.288148
VUV 125.51883
WST 2.951409
XAF 658.491861
XAG 0.034768
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.857271
XDR 0.796265
XOF 658.491861
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.153479
ZAR 19.226126
ZMK 9516.522147
ZMW 28.986446
ZWL 340.434029
  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0050

    24.725

    -0.02%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    62.37

    +0.4%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    13.27

    -0.75%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.55

    -0.24%

  • BCE

    -0.3700

    26.84

    -1.38%

  • BCC

    -2.2000

    140.35

    -1.57%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    45.95

    -0.37%

  • RIO

    -0.1900

    60.43

    -0.31%

  • AZN

    -0.2500

    65.04

    -0.38%

  • GSK

    -0.7200

    34.39

    -2.09%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.21

    -0.23%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    35.49

    +0.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    6.79

    -4.71%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.68

    -0.81%

  • BP

    0.4800

    29.05

    +1.65%

In western Germany, 'temporary' life a year after flood
In western Germany, 'temporary' life a year after flood / Photo: Ina FASSBENDER - AFP

In western Germany, 'temporary' life a year after flood

In Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler in western Germany, residents are still waiting for the return of normal life a year after the town was devastated by deadly flash floods.

Text size:

Around 18,000 inhabitants, or more than half the local population, were affected by the disaster in this once picturesque town in western Germany known for its thermal baths.

The anniversary of the night of July 14, 2021 will be marked on Thursday with the visit of Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

The town mayor, Guido Orthen, will be able to show Scholz roads cleared of the muck and debris strewn by the flood waters that submerged the town.

But a return to the way things were "will still take time", he says, with the rebuild very much a work in progress.

"We still have temporary infrastructure, temporary playgrounds, temporary schools, temporary roads that make life possible," he says.

None of the 18 bridges that used to cross the Ahr river is functional yet, with three temporary crossings installed in their place.

- 'Disenchantment' -

The traces of the flood are everywhere, from the collapsed banks by the roadside to the high-water mark on many of the buildings.

While officials may want to rebuild things as quickly as possible, they are also under pressure to make sure residents are protected from future floods.

As it stands, "we are still living in the same dangerous situation as a year ago", Orthen says, putting residents in a state of anxiety any time bad weather is forecast.

In Germany, 185 people were killed in the disaster. The majority of the fatalities were in the Ahr valley, which winds along 40 kilometres (25 miles) to where the river joins the Rhine to the south of Bonn.

Mayor Orthen is dismayed that protective measures to keep residents safe from future floods are subject to interminable bureaucratic discussions.

In zones with high flood risk, the houses that have been destroyed are not permitted to be rebuilt, while those that were damaged can be repaired.

Moreover, town officials face a mountain of paperwork, with Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler expected to submit 1,400 requests for reconstruction projects by the end of June 2023.

"We won't be able to," Orthen says. Even with reinforcements, his staff is "exhausted".

After a year of living in a "state of emergency", the elected official sees "disenchantment" and a "feeling of powerlessness" growing among his residents.

Over 2,000 people have left Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler in the last year.

In the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, only 500 million euros ($506 million) in aid have been handed out of the total 15 billion euros set aside.

The slow progress is an "affront to those affected", according to conservative state legislator Horst Gies, quoted in the General Anzeiger daily.

In the neighbouring region of North Rhine-Westphalia, 1.6 billion euros of government support has been approved for use, out of a total of 12.3 billion euros.

- 'We want to exist' -

In the town of Sinzig, around 15 kilometres from Ahrweiler, candles have been lit in front of a former care home for the mentally disabled, where 12 residents lost their lives in the floods.

The organisation that ran the establishment, Lebenshilfe, is still looking for a location to open a new facility.

"Our discussions with the mayor's office and the local administration still haven't produced anything," says Ulrich van Bebber from Lebenshilfe.

Frustration is building among those trying to rebuild their lives as promised help is slow to arrive.

"We want to exist in the eyes of Germany," says Iris Muenn-Buschow, the ground floor of her home still in the middle of repair works.

"We have the impression that everything else that goes on in the world is more important than what happens here in Germany," she says.

With her husband, she has founded an organisation called "the Ahr valley stands up" ("das Ahrtal steht auf") which has organised a series of protests.

"Nobody has forgotten the Ahr valley and the other regions," Rhineland-Palatinate state prime minister Malu Dreyer said recently, stressing the extent of the work still left to do.

W.O.Ludwig--NZN