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MADRID—The catastrophic torrential rains that overflowed rivers and normally dry canals in eastern Spain last week triggered flash floods that submerged entire communities and killed scores of people.
The deluge left behind a landscape of devastation, especially in Valencia, the hardest-hit region. The search for the dead and missing continues, more than a week since the Oct. 29 floods hit—as well as a gargantuan cleanup and recovery effort.
The consortium has received 116,000 insurance claims for flood damage, with 60 percent of the claims for cars and 31 percent for homes. Spain’s Association of Insurance Companies anticipates the flooding will break a historic record for payouts.
The Transport Ministry has so far repaired 144 miles of road and rail tracks but the high speed train line between Valencia and Madrid is still demolished.
The storms honed in on the Magro and Turia Rivers and the Poyo canal, turning them into swift currents that swept away everything in their path. To the human eye, it looked as if a tsunami-like wave of water and mud cut a swath through the southern outskirts of the city of Valencia.
The European Space Agency said that, according to satellite images captured on Oct. 31, water covered an area of 38,600 acres. About 190,000 people were directly affected, the agency said.
The operation includes 8,000 soldiers—2,100 of them belonging to military emergency units specialized in disaster response—along with 9,200 additional police officers from other parts of Spain.
Thousands of ordinary citizens volunteered, with no definite estimate as to exactly how many, have helped from day one with the cleanup effort.
And at this point, no one can guess when the recovery effort will be concluded.