PARIS, Dec 16 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Two pensioners have been
killed and tens of thousand of homes left without electricity as gale force
winds and flooding hit southwestern France over the weekend.
Eleven departments remained on orange alert weather warnings.
A 70-year-old man died in the Pyrenees-Atlantique in the Basque Country on Friday when his vehicle struck a fallen tree.
In Espiens in the Lot-et-Garonne region a 76-year-old man was swept away by rising waters when he went out to fetch his mail on Friday.
Rescuers found his body 24 hours later more than a kilometre from his home.
Five other people were injured, two seriously, when trees fell on their
vehicles.
As many as 40,000 homes were without power on Saturday afternoon and some 25,000 remained so from Normandy down to the southwest by early evening, electricity utility operator Enedis said.
A company spokesperson added some 2,000 technicians had been deployed to restore power to those customers, urging people to call a dedicated hotline if they saw power lines had come down.
Overnight, some 400,000 homes had suffered power outages as floods
inundated parts of the region with waters rising to up to nearly 2.7 metres and by 30 centimetres per hour in some areas.
Flooding and landslides cut off access to the skiing stations of Gourette
and Artouste, while the distribution of drinkable water in the commune of
Laruns was interrupted.
In the nearby Landes department, about 600 people were evacuated on Friday as a preventive measure in areas where the Gaves de Pau and Oloron rivers converge.
The Alps, where weather services had warned of heightened avalanche risk, were earlier downgraded from the orange alert level, as was upper Corsica where winds had been packing speeds of up to 150 km/h. — NNN-AGENCIES