<div dir="ltr"><div>I heard about this event, but till reading more carefully about this disaster, I did not realize the full extent of the catastrophe. Thousands of landslides wiping out homes, active land mines driven in flood waters to end up who knows where, with the possibility a land mine could end up in hydroelectric turbines, 300,000 left without electricity due to flood waters shutting down power stations, more than 20,000 forced from their homes, etc. The total death toll is unknown at this time... <br>
<br></div><div>But don't link this massive record setting flooding to anthropogenic global warming... It's a hoax promoted by irrational climate change alarmists...<br></div><div><br><a href="http://www.dw.de/serbia-and-bosnia-hit-by-record-flooding/a-17640260">http://www.dw.de/serbia-and-bosnia-hit-by-record-flooding/a-17640260</a><br>
<h1> "... the worst natural catastrophe that has ever hit Serbia"</h1>
<p class="">
The heaviest rains and floods in 120 years have hit the Balkan states of
Serbia and Bosnia, forcing hundreds out of their homes. There have been
calls for international assistance. <br></p><p>
Five casualties, one a firefighter on a rescue mission, drowned as
torrential rain forced hundreds of people out of their homes in Serbia.
Some 100,000 households were left without electricity. Schools in the
Serbian capital stayed closed on Friday.</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.dw.de/storm-floods-balkans-serbia-declares-emergency/a-17639326">Belgrade authorities said the average rainfall of a two-month period hit the city in just 40 hours</a>. The government has asked the European Union and Russia for assistance.</p>
<p>
"This is the worst natural catastrophe that has ever hit Serbia,"
Serbia's Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said while touring the flooded
areas. Three thousand people were evacuated from their homes in the west
and southwest of the country.</p>
<p>
Some 100,000 households with an estimated 300,000 inhabitants, mostly in
rural western Serbia, have been left without electricity as the
country's sole power utility company EPS said it had halted two
hydro-power plants due to high water levels on the Morava river.</p>
<p>
<strong>Bosnian military wades in</strong></p>
<p>
Authorities declared a state of emergency in several parts of Bosnia,
ordering the army to help out rescuers. Two towns in western Bosnia,
Maglaj and Doboj, could be reached only by boats, as all the roads and
streets were completely flooded. Most schools were closed.</p>
<p>
Bosnian military helicopters evacuated hundreds of people while EU
troops in Bosnia joined the effort with trucks and helicopters.</p>------------------------------------------<br><h1>Flooding in Balkans triggers landslides, disturbs minefields</h1><a href="http://www.dw.de/flooding-in-balkans-triggers-landslides-disturbs-minefields/a-17644507">http://www.dw.de/flooding-in-balkans-triggers-landslides-disturbs-minefields/a-17644507</a><br>
<br>The worst flooding in the Balkans in more than a century has triggered
landslides across Serbia and Bosnia. It has also moved some of the
estimated one million land mines left over from the region's war in the
1990s.
<br><br><p>
Authorities warned that while the torrential rains have stopped, water
levels would keep rising into Sunday night with the danger of flood
surges along rivers.</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.dw.de/serbs-brace-for-more-rising-water/a-17644013">Thousands of people have been forced from their homes</a>
and the floods have threatened to inundate Serbia's main power plant,
which supplies electricity to a third of the country and most of the
capital, Belgrade. Some 100,00 people in Serbia and Bosnia are without
power.</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.dw.de/serbia-and-bosnia-hit-by-record-flooding/a-17640260">Some forty people are reported to have died</a>
with the number expected to rise as recovery operations continue.
Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic said Sunday that 12 bodies had
been found so far in Obrenovac, site of the coal-fired Nikola Tesla
power plant.</p>
<p>
Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic has been raising the issue for
several days as he played in the Rome Masters. After beating Rafael
Nadal in the final on Sunday he said: "I want to make a a special
dedication to my country Serbia, which is suffering a lot with
flooding."</p>
<p>
More than 20,000 people have been forced from their homes in Serbia.</p>
<p>
The cities of Orasje and Brcko in northeast Bosnia, where the Sava River
forms the natural border with Croatia, were in danger of being
overwhelmed. Officials in Brcko ordered six villages to be evacuated.</p>
<p>
Civil protection commander Fahrudin Solak said the Sava River was
spilling over part of the flood barrier in Orasje while emergency
workers tried desperately to reinforce it with sandbags.</p>
<p>
Large parts of eastern Croatia were underwater too, with several
villages cut off and hundreds of people still fleeing the flooded zone
in boats and trucks. Refugees were being housed in sports halls and
schools, and aid centers were set up to distribute medicine, food,
blankets and clothing.</p>
<p>
The Bosnian army said it had 1,500 troops helping on the ground. But
many bridges have been washed away, leaving communities dependent on
airlifts. Helicopters from the European Union, Slovenia and Croatia have
been helping in rescue efforts.</p>
<p>
<strong>Landslides and land mines</strong></p>
<p>
The rain caused an estimated 2,100 landslides that covered roads, homes
and whole villages throughout Bosnia. Another thousand landslides were
reported in Serbia.</p>
<p>
The deluge has also unleashed a new danger from land mines, of which an
estimated million have been left over from Bosnia's 1992-95 war.</p>
<p>
Nearly 120,000 of the unexploded devices remain in more than 9,400
carefully marked minefields. But the weather has toppled warning signs
and, in many cases, dislodged the mines themselves.</p>
<p>
Beyond the immediate danger to people in Bosnia, loose mines could also
create an international problem if floodwaters carry the explosives
downstream. Experts warned that mines could travel through half of
southeast Europe or get stuck in the turbines of a hydroelectric dam.</p>------------------------------------------<br></div>Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett<br></div>