Macedonia declares emergency after flooding kills 21

Macedonia’s government declared a state of emergency on Sunday in parts of the capital hit by torrential rain and floods that left at least 21 people dead, six missing and dozens injured, authorities said.

Police and army helicopters searched for the missing and evacuated hundreds from the flood zone. Mayor Koce Trajanovski described the damage as “the worst Skopje has ever seen.” He said that the deadly deluge created hazardous rainfall accumulations within only 20 minutes. “It was like a water bomb has fallen!” he said. Many witnesses have described that victims drowned after being trapped in their houses when torrents suddenly swept through the area.

The heavy rain, strong winds and thunderstorms struck Skopje and its northern suburbs late yesterday. Special police, army units and firefighters were sent to the worst-hit areas as well as the nearby villages of Stajkovci, Cento, Aracinovo and Smiljkovci.

Government spokesman Aleksandar Gjorgiev told The Associated Press a state of emergency had been declared for two weeks in the most affected areas. Hundreds of homes and vehicles were destroyed by the floods, roads were impassable and several areas were without electricity. Authorities said more than 1,000 people had been evacuated so far.

Skopje’s city council held an emergency session and decided to provide financial help to victims’ families, giving 180,000 denars (3,000 euros) to each. Authorities said they will open shelters for people from affected areas.

After a meeting of the National Crisis Management Center, Health Minister Nikola Todorov said many of the injured had fractures and contusions. Meteorologists said more torrential rain and strong winds were expected later on Sunday.

Authorities said at least 5,000 people would need urgently food and water. They urged people to stay at home and to only drink bottled water. Further north in Croatia, stormy winds have disrupted road and sea traffic at the height of the tourist season. The state news agency HINA says parts of the main highway connecting the capital of Zagreb with the Adriatic coast remained closed on Sunday.

Only cars were allowed down the sections of a highway and a regional road further north near the port of Rijeka. Disruptions created by the bad weather have created traffic backups, with many tourists trying to reach Croatia’s coastal resorts along the Adriatic Sea.

Dr Soumya Swaminathan Elected Fellow of Royal Society; MP Kanimozhi Hails Historic Achievement.

Former WHO Chief Scientist Dr Soumya Swaminathan has been elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society, becoming only the se...

A. Pavan Kumar Reddy Appointed as New Coimbatore District SP

IPS officer Allatipalli Pavan Kumar Reddy has been appointed as the new Superintendent of Police for Coimbatore district...

கோவை மாவட்ட புதிய காவல் கண்காணிப்பாளராக ஏ. பவன் குமார் ரெட்டி நியமனம்

தமிழ்நாடு அரசின் சமீபத்திய ஐ.பி.எஸ் அதிகாரிகள் பணியிட மாற்ற உத்தரவின் பேரில், ஐ.பி.எஸ் அதிகாரி பவன் குமார் ரெட்டி கோவை ம...

SIMA Delegation Meets CM, Urges Immediate Relief on Power-Related Issues..!

A delegation from The Southern India Mills’Association (SIMA) met Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Joseph Vijay in Chennai and...

SSLC Results 2026: Coimbatore Tops Kongu Region with 97.09 Percent Pass Rate..!

Pudukkottai, Sivagangai and Thanjavur emerged as the top three districts in Tamil Nadu in the SSLC Public Examination 20...

Pharmacies Strike: Over 1,500 Medical Shops Closed Across Coimbatore; Public Faces Hardship

More than 1,500 medical shops across Coimbatore district remained closed today as part of a nationwide strike demanding...