Villareal followers pay tribute to victims of Spanish floods that killed 223 because it emerges Valencia president was lunching till 6pm on day the catastrophe hit
Villarreal fans today paid tribute to the victims of Valencia‘s deadly floods during the team’s LaLiga match against Deportivo Alaves after it emerged that the provincial president lunched until 6pm on the day disaster struck.
Football supporters held up yellow banners with the slogan ‘forca Valencia’ at today’s match in the Estadio de la Ceramica stadium in Villarreal, Spain after vicious flash flooding on October 29 that claimed the lives of 223 people.
Villarreal and Deportivo Alaves players also paid tribute to the victims by sporting a black ribbon and the same slogan as their supporters on their football kit.
Spain’s Football Federation had been forced to adjust its LaLiga schedule last week in response to the floods.
Real Madrid’s match against Valencia last weekend was postponed, while Villarreal’s home match against Rayo Vallecano was also suspended.
Villarreal fans today paid tribute to the victims of Valencia’s deadly floods during the team’s LaLiga match against Deportivo Alaves
Two volunteers bid each other farewell in the flood-hit municipality of Paiporta, Valencia province
Valencia’s regional President Carlos Mazon has come under fire for his slow response to the disaster. Protests will be held tonight across Spain calling for his resignation after it emerged that he was two and a half hours late to an emergency meeting as he enjoyed a long lunch
Spain’s province of Valencia suffered a phenomenal weather catastrophe referred to in the country as the ‘DANA’ 13 days ago, resulting in a torrential storm hitting the area with no warning.
More rain fell in eight hours than in the last year, which meant that the Poyo ravine overflowed, sweeping anything or anyone that got in its way away.
At least 100,000 cars were damaged, and the death toll currently stands at 223, but it is expected to rise as many remain missing.
It comes as Spaniards across the country plan to demonstrate against local, regional and national governments this weekend for their lack of preparedness and slow response to the catastrophic floods.
Protesters will also call for the resignation of the president of the Valencian province Carlos Mazon.
Fury deepened further after it emerged yesterday that Mazon had been enjoying a long and leisurely lunch that ended at 6pm with a journalist on the day torrential rainfall struck Valencia.
Football supporters observe a minute of silence in honor of those affected by the floods in Valencia
Players pose for a photo in tribute of the Valencia floods victims during the LaLiga match between Villarreal CF and Deportivo Alaves at Estadio de la Ceramica
Spain’s Football Federation had been forced to adjust its LaLiga schedule last week in response to the floods
As reported by Spanish daily newspaper El Pais, this meant he was two and a half hours late to an emergency meeting where authorities were already discussing the deadly flooding in the region.
Just hours after disaster unfolded, authorities appeared overwhelmed by the enormity of the disaster, with survivors left to rely on each other and the esprit de corps of mud-caked volunteers who rushed in to fill the void.
The provincial president was pelted with mud last week by angry locals during a visit the flood-stricken town of Paiporta.
Mazon was accompanied by Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia, as well as Spanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez.
Crowds of furious valencians shouted ‘murderers’ and other insults at the royals as well as government officials during the visit, with police having to step in, with some officers on horseback to keep back the crowd of several dozens who hurled mud and waved shovels and poles threateningly in the air.
Meanwhile the sea of mud and stagnant water submerging Spanish towns more than 10 days after the country’s worst floods in decades has sparked a sickening stench and health fears.
‘That’s the rotten meat,’ said Toni Marco, pointing to a destroyed supermarket in the devastated town of Sedavi from which a disgusting odour wafted when AFP visited.
The meat was only removed recently, well after the floods cut the refrigerators’ electricity supply, added Marco, a 40-year-old employee of a private cleaning company.
The nearby town of Catarroja also remains a mud bath after the October 29 disaster that has claimed 219 lives, with a powerful reek compounding the woes of survivors.
The diversity of matter decomposing under the mud produces a spectrum of smells ranging from the mildly unpleasant to the outright repulsive.
Mud and stagnant water submerging Spanish towns more than 10 days after the country’s worst floods in decades has sparked a sickening stench
Matter decomposing under the mud produces a spectrum of smells
It is believed that dead animals may also lie buried under the mud
‘Each decomposition of an element smells differently,’ which explains why the odours vary from street to street, said Angel Aldehuela, a 51-year-old firefighter from the southern Seville region.
Dead animals may also lie buried under the mud, he said.
When the mud dries, the organic matter decomposes without oxygen and ‘that’s where those smells we’re not used to start to appear,’ explained Miguel Rodilla, a biologist at Valencia’s Polytechnic University.
‘There aren’t necessarily bodies nearby, but simply organic matter decomposing.’
In scenes reminiscent of the Covid-19 pandemic, rescuers, volunteers and residents have worn face-masks and gloves during the clean-up, while some people have complained of the stink causing headaches and dizziness.
Breathing in the pestilential miasma ‘isn’t ideal for health’, but ‘higher concentrations’ of decomposing matter would be necessary to make it toxic, said Rodilla.
Stagnant water can trigger gastrointestinal disorders or pneumonia, Health Minister Monica Garcia told public radio RNE, but she ruled out the possibility of an ‘outbreak’.
The health board of the Valencia region, particularly crippled by the floods, has also reported no outbreak of infectious diseases or a major threat to public health.
Even so, regional health authorities have asked local councils to apply measures to control and prevent the proliferation of mosquitoes and other insects capable of spreading diseases.
A man walks over a mountain of scrap metal and personal belongings piled up on a street in Aldaia, in Valencia Spain, 08 November 2024
A woman looks up several cars piled up on a street in Paiporta, in Valencia, Spain
Residents look at cars piled up after being swept away by floods
People push a car to take it out from a flood damaged garage in Massanassa
Volunteers walk on a mud-covered street as they leave Massanassa
Aldehuela warned that the foetid fumes enveloping Catarroja ‘will get worse, without a doubt’, predicting they would linger for up to a week more.
But in towns where the muck has been cleared swiftly, an aroma of bread or fruit has replaced the stench, the head of the army’s emergencies unit Javier Marcos said on Friday.
Hospitals in Valencia have been preparing for a wave of infections and illnesses linked to the stagnant flood water and stinking mud.
Experts have predicted that mosquito-borne diseases and skin infections will rise as the clean-up continues and are also sounding warnings about gastroenteritis and Hepatitis A linked to the consumption of contaminated drinking water.
The stagnant water has also been described as the ‘perfect habitat’ for the rapid rise in the number of cockroaches and rats.
It comes as Spaniards across the country plan to demonstrate against local, regional and national governments this weekend for their lack of preparedness and slow response to the catastrophic floods.
Protesters will also call for the resignation of the president of the Valencian province Carlos Mazon, who was pelted with mud last week by angry locals during a visit the flood-stricken town of Paiporta.
Mazon was accompanied by Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia, as well as Spanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez.
Crowds of furious valencians shouted ‘murderers’ and other insults at the royals as well as government officials during the visit, with police having to step in, with some officers on horseback to keep back the crowd of several dozens who hurled mud and waved shovels and poles threateningly in the air.