You are here

World

World section

NATO reaffirms commitment to Ukraine and welcomes Sweden into the alliance

By - Jul 12,2023 - Last updated at Jul 12,2023

VILNIUS- In a decisive response, NATO has reaffirmed its commitment to an Open Door policy, Article 10 of the Washington Treaty, and Ukraine's sovereignty. The alliance also extended a warm welcome to Sweden as a full member, following an agreement with the NATO Secretary General, the President of Türkiye, and the Swedish Prime Minister.

Terrorism, in its various forms and manifestations, also poses a considerable asymmetric threat to global peace, prosperity, and the security of NATO members, according to Vilnius Summit Communiqué issued by NATO Heads of State and Government participating in the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Vilnius.

The security environment is defined by strategic competition, pervasive instability, and recurrent shocks. This is particularly exacerbated by conflicts and instability in Africa and the Middle East, directly affecting the security of NATO and its partners, it indicated.

Peace in the Euro-Atlantic area has been disrupted, with the Russian Federation violating norms and principles contributing to the region's stability and predictability. As such, the Russian Federation is identified as posing the most significant direct threat to NATO members' security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area.

Russia is squarely blamed for its unjustifiable and unprovoked war of aggression against Ukraine, which has severely undermined Euro-Atlantic and global security, it added.

“NATO stands in unwavering solidarity with the government and people of Ukraine, supporting their inherent right to self-defence as enshrined in Article 51 of the UN Charter. NATO affirms its commitment to step up political and practical support to Ukraine as it continues to defend its independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity. The alliance appreciates the efforts of all Allies and partners in supporting Ukraine,” according to the communiqué.

The NATO community fully said it fully endorses Ukraine's right to choose its own security arrangements, affirming that Ukraine's future lies within NATO. This commitment echoes the pledge made at the 2008 Summit in Bucharest, stating that Ukraine will become a NATO member. The alliance acknowledges Ukraine's substantial progress on its reform path and increased interoperability with the Alliance, moving beyond the need for the Membership Action Plan.

In an effort to further integrate Ukraine with NATO, a substantial package of expanded political and practical support has been agreed upon. The establishment of the NATO-Ukraine Council aims to advance political dialogue, engagement, and cooperation, with Ukraine and Allies sitting as equal members.

The Alliance  said it continues to prioritise the delivery of urgently needed non-lethal assistance to Ukraine through the Comprehensive Assistance Package (CAP). Since the Madrid Summit, Allies and partners have committed over 500 million Euros to the CAP. This package aims to help rebuild the Ukrainian security and defense sector and transition Ukraine towards full interoperability with NATO.

 

Invite to Ukraine to be issued when 'conditions are met' – NATO chief

By - Jul 12,2023 - Last updated at Jul 12,2023

VILNIUS- NATO will extend an invite to Ukraine to join the alliance when 'members agree and conditions are met’, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters Tuesday. 

The NATO chief did not provide a specific timeline for this invitation, a point that drew criticism from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. 

In a tweet, Zelenskiy expressed his concern, stating it would be 'absurd' if NATO leaders did not offer his country a concrete timeframe for membership.

Stoltenberg said that NATO has reaffirmed Ukraine's future membership in the alliance. 

During a press conference at the NATO Summit in Lithuania’s Vilnius, he stated the pathway to membership would transition from a two-step to a one-step process, once Ukraine fulfills all prerequisite conditions.

"Allies have agreed on a package of three elements to bring Ukraine closer to NATO," said Stoltenberg, outlining a new multi-year assistance program for Ukraine. This program is designed to facilitate the transition from Soviet-era to NATO standards and doctrines, to reconstruct Ukraine’s security and defense sector, and to cover critical needs such as fuel, demining equipment, and medical supplies,” he said.

Additionally, a new NATO-Ukraine Council will be established, serving as a forum for crisis consultations and decision-making. "We will meet as equals," Stoltenberg added, expressing anticipation for the inaugural meeting of the Council with President Zelenskyy.

The third element of the package affirmed Ukraine's future NATO membership and the elimination of the requirement for a Membership Action Plan, effectively streamlining Ukraine’s membership process. The invitation to join NATO will be issued "when Allies agree and conditions are met," making this a comprehensive package and a clear path towards Ukraine's NATO membership.

The Secretary General revealed that Allies have approved the most extensive defense plans since the end of the Cold War, aimed to counter the main threats NATO faces: Russia and terrorism. 

These plans include a high-readiness force of 300,000 troops, backed by significant air and naval power. 

He revealed defense expenditure by European Allies and Canada will increase by 8.3% in 2023, marking the biggest increase in decades. "Since 2014, they will have invested an extra 450 billion US dollars in defense," Stoltenberg noted, adding that eleven Allies now reach or exceed the 2% benchmark and expecting this number to increase significantly the next year.

The Secretary General characterised the package as substantial, with numerous elements designed to move Ukraine closer to NATO and towards membership. 

He highlighted the practical support, such as interoperability and defense sector reforms, as crucial conditions for membership. He emphasized that this package sends a strong political message and offers robust support from NATO Allies, which includes military aid and practical support to ensure full interoperability. 

"Both when it comes to political message on the path forward for membership, and the concrete support from NATO Allies, there has never been a stronger message from NATO at any time,” Stoltenberg added.

 

Top UN rights body confronts Koran burning

By - Jul 12,2023 - Last updated at Jul 12,2023

GENEVA — The United Nations said hate speech was on the rise everywhere, as the UN Human Rights Council held an urgent debate Tuesday to address recent Koran-burning incidents.

These appear tailor-made to inflame anger and divide communities, the UN human rights chief Volker Turk said as he opened the debate at the UN's top rights body in Geneva.

A Koran was burnt outside the Swedish capital's main mosque on June 28, triggering a diplomatic backlash across the Muslim world.

Pakistan and other nations called for a discussion of "the alarming rise in premeditated and public acts of religious hatred as manifested by recurrent desecration of the Holy Koran in some European and other countries."

Pakistan and other members of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation hope to get a resolution passed on the issue on Tuesday or later in the week.

Turk said recent Koran-burning incidents "appear to have been manufactured to express contempt and inflame anger; to drive wedges between people; and to provoke, transforming differences of perspective into hatred and, perhaps, violence".

He said that irrespective of the law or personal belief, “people need to act with respect for others”.

“Speech and inflammatory acts against Muslims; Islamophobia; anti-Semitism; and actions and speech that target Christians — or minority groups such as Ahmadis, Baha’is or Yazidis — are manifestations of utter disrespect. They are offensive, irresponsible and wrong,” said Turk.

He said hate speech needed to be combated through dialogue, education, raising awareness and inter-faith engagement.

“Powered by the tidal forces of social media, and in a context of increasing international and national discord and polarisation, hate speech of every kind is rising, everywhere,” Turk said.

“It is harmful to individuals, and it damages the social cohesion necessary to the sound functioning of all societies.”

Salwan Momika, 37, who fled from Iraq to Sweden several years ago, stomped on the Muslim holy book and set several pages alight in Stockholm.

His actions came as Muslims around the world began marking the Eid Al Adha holiday and as the annual hajj pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia was drawing to a close.

The Geneva-based Human Rights Council meets for three regular sessions per year. The UN’s top rights body is currently in the second session, which runs until Friday.

The Swedish government condemned the Koran burning as “Islamophobic”, but added that Sweden had a “constitutionally-protected right to freedom of assembly, expression and demonstration”.

 

NATO chief says alliance to abolish Ukraine’s Membership Action Plan requirement

By - Jul 11,2023 - Last updated at Jul 11,2023

VILNIUS- NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Tuesday fellow NATO allies are expected to make an announcement to eliminate the Membership Action Plan (MAP) requirement for Ukraine, paving a smoother path for the country's future induction into the alliance.

“Ukraine has come a long way since we made the decision in 2008 that the next step would be a Membership Action Plan. Ukraine is much closer to NATO, so I think the time has come to reflect that in NATO decisions”, Stoltenberg said on the sidelines of the summit of NATO leaders in Vilnius.

Removing the MAP requirement will send a very “strong, unified and positive” message from NATO to Ukraine, Stoltenberg said.

Such a move would streamline Ukraine's accession process by trimming it from two stages to just one, he explained to the press.

A collective letter outlining this consensus is anticipated to be published by the alliance's members following the conclusion of the summit on Tuesday.

 

 

 

Erdogan pledges to present Sweden's NATO membership bid to Turkish Parliament- NATO Chief

By - Jul 11,2023 - Last updated at Jul 11,2023

VILNIUS— In a historic move, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has agreed to present Sweden's NATO membership bid to the Turkish parliament "as soon as possible," NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg announced on Monday.

Following talks with both Erdogan and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, Stoltenberg conveyed the news during a press briefing.

"President Erdogan has agreed to forward the accession protocol for Sweden to the Grand National Assembly as soon as possible and work closely with the Assembly to ensure ratification,” he told reporters.

Stoltenberg lauded the development as "historic" and highlighted the commitment by Turkey to expedite the process of ratification within the Grand National Assembly.

"This is an historic day because we have a clear commitment by Turkey to submit the ratification documents to the Grand National Assembly, and to work also with the assembly to ensure ratification," he said.

The meeting resulted in a commitment from Turkey and Sweden to continue their cooperation in the fight against terrorism beyond Sweden's accession to NATO. A new bilateral Security Compact between the two nations was agreed upon, and Stoltenberg announced the establishment of the position of Special Coordinator for Counter-Terrorism within NATO.

"Completing Sweden’s accession to NATO is an historic step that benefits the security of all NATO Allies at this critical time. It makes us all stronger and safer," said Stoltenberg, emphasizing the significance of the event.

The Secretary General's announcement came on the eve of a NATO summit in Lithuania, following a year of Turkey's objections to Sweden's NATO accession.

Erdogan called on the countries that have been blocking Turkey's entrance into the European Union for over 50 years.

He said, "Come and open the way for Turkey’s membership in the European Union. When you pave the way for Turkey, we’ll pave the way for Sweden as we did for Finland."

The alliance leaders, including US President Joe Biden, will meet just 151km from Russia itself. A contingent of approximately 1,000 troops from 16 NATO allies have been deployed to safeguard the summit, contributing the advanced air defence systems lacking in the Baltic states.

The situation in Ukraine, NATO’s further strengthening of its collective deterrence and defence posture, NATO’s partnerships with MENA partners and Indo-Pacific partners and NATO’s practical support to specific partners, including Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, will feature high on the summit’s agenda.

According to NATO, one of the key issues set to dominate the summit is Ukraine's fate amid Russia's invasion and its NATO membership application. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is expected to make a powerful appeal for Ukraine's inclusion once the war is over. Measures to strengthen political ties, offer long-term support and set up a NATO-Ukraine Council are among the likely responses.

NATO leaders will also have to resolve internal squabbling, with issues like Turkey’s reluctance to approve Sweden’s membership on the table.

Hosting the summit is a matter of great pride for Lithuania. The event is being held at LITEXPO – the Lithuanian Exhibition and Congress Centre, and marks the most high-profile international event that Lithuania has hosted since it joined the alliance in 2004.

Allies will also take major steps to strengthen deterrence and defence, with the adoption of three new regional defence plans to counter the two main threats to NATO: Russia and terrorism. The plans will be supported by 300,000 troops on higher readiness, including substantial air and naval combat power, NATO said.

Allies are also expected to endorse a Defence Production Action Plan to “aggregate demand, boost capacity, and increase interoperability” and a more ambitious defence investment pledge to invest a minimum of 2 per cent of Gross Domestic Product annually on defence.

Rescuers save 86 migrants from boat near Canary Isles

By - Jul 11,2023 - Last updated at Jul 11,2023

MADRID — Spain's coastguard said on Monday it rescued 86 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa from a boat near the Canary Islands that had been spotted earlier in the day by a rescue plane.

The Salvamento Maritimo coastguard service said they had found the boat with six females and 80 males on board as rescuers were searching for a missing migrant boat that had "left Senegal with around 200 people on board".

It did not indicate the ages of those rescued.

When a rescue plane spotted the vessel, it was initially thought to have "around 200 people on board", a spokeswoman said.

"We can't be 100 per cent sure but it's likely it is the same boat," she said.

But the coastguard later acknowledged that the estimate by the plane's crew was incorrect.

"It is difficult to determine the number of people from the air," she later told AFP, saying those rescued were being taken to Arguineguin port on Gran Canaria where they would arrive around 19:00 GMT.

The situation remains confused, however, and the spokeswoman told AFP she was not able to say whether there was another boat adrift in the same area with 200 people on board.

Helena Maleno, head of Spanish NGO Caminando Fronteras which helps migrant boats in distress, said that a vessel had left the southern Senegalese town of "Kafountine on June 27 with approximately 200 people on board".

“There are many minors on board,” she said in an audio message, explaining the families “told us about the disappearance of the boat saying they had had no news for several days”.

Kafountine is a fishing village in the southern part of Senegal, which lies at least 1,700 kilometres  south of Spain’s Canary Islands.

She said the NGO knew of two other boats also missing after leaving Senegal.

“Two of them set sail from Mbour in Senegal, one carrying between 50 and 60 people and the other, 65 people,” she said, referring to a town about 75 kilometres south of the capital Dakar.

An easy departure point 

 

Senegal, and more specifically the Kafountine region, is a regular departure point for migrants seeking to reach Europe.

For them, the nearest entry point is Spain’s Canary Islands, although Spain itself is often only a stopover as the migrants make their way to other EU countries.

David Diatta, the mayor of Kafountine, told AFP some migrants had recently left the village but that he’d not heard any news about them.

“They are Senegalese, Gambians, Guineans, Sierra Leoneans... Most of the time, they are foreigners,” he said.

He said people chose to leave from Kafountine because it is surrounded by islands and inlets which provide hiding places for people smugglers and migrants.

“As a local authority, we have tried to raise awareness, but the state’s silence is regrettable — there are very few gendarmes on the ground [to stop them] and we lack the resources,” he said.

In June 2022, a pirogue — a long wooden vessel — with migrants on board caught fire in the area, leaving 15 dead and 20 injured.

“People from outside the area organise their departure as they wish, and it’s only after the event that we find out about it,” said Abdoulaye Demba, head coordinator of the local fishing council.

He said none of the migrants’ families approach him directly for help because they know it is against the law.

 

A highly dangerous journey 

 

The Atlantic route to the Canaries is particularly dangerous due to the strong currents, with migrants travelling in overloaded boats, which are often unseaworthy, and without enough drinking water.

Many boats leave from ports in Morocco, Western Sahara or Mauritania but they also come from countries further south such as Senegal.

According to figures released by Caminando last week, a total of 778 people died while trying to reach Spain’s Canary Islands by boat in the first half of 2023.

Figures from the International Organisation for Migration point to 126 dead or missing over the same period.

Spain has long been a key entry point for migrants seeking a better life in Europe, but the number of Atlantic crossings began surging in late 2019 after increased patrols along Europe’s southern coast dramatically reduced Mediterranean crossings.

In the first six months of this year, a total of 7,213 migrants reached the Canary Islands by boat. That figure is nearly 20 per cent lower than the 8,853 that arrived in the same period a year earlier, interior ministry figures show.

Heat killed 61,000 in Europe's record-breaking 2022 summer — study

Majority of deaths recorded among people over 80

By - Jul 11,2023 - Last updated at Jul 11,2023

A pedestrian uses an umbrella while walking during a heatwave in Seville on Monday (AFP photo)

PARIS — More than 61,000 people died due to the heat during Europe's record-breaking summer last year, a study said on Monday which called for more to be done to protect against even deadlier heatwaves expected in the coming years.

The world's fastest warming continent experienced its hottest summer on record in 2022, as countries were hit by blistering heatwaves, crop-withering droughts and devastating wildfires.

The European Union's statistics agency Eurostat had reported an unusually high number of excess deaths over the summer, but the amount directly linked to the heat had not been previously quantified.

A team of researchers looked at data on temperature and mortality from 2015 to 2022 for 823 regions across 35 European countries, covering a total of 543 million people.

The researchers from the Barcelona Institute for Global Health and France's health research institute INSERM used models to predict the deaths attributable to temperature for each region in every week of 2022's summer.

They estimated that 61,672 deaths were linked to the heat between May 30 and September 4 last year, according to the study published in the journal Nature Medicine.

A particularly intense heatwave in the week of July 18-24 caused more than 11,600 deaths alone, the study said.

"It is a very high number of deaths," said Hicham Achebak, an INSERM researcher and study co-author.

"We knew the effect of heat on mortality after 2003, but with this analysis, we see that there is still a lot of work that needs to be done to protect the population," he told AFP.

More than 70,000 excess deaths were recorded in 2003 during one of the worst heatwaves in European history.

 

Women and over-80s vulnerable 

 

Last year France recorded the biggest rise in heat compared to its previous summer average, with a jump of 2.43ºC, the study said.

Switzerland was not far behind with a 2.30ºC rise, followed by Italy with 2.28ºC and Hungary with 2.13ºC.

Italy had the highest death toll linked to the heat with 18,010, followed by Spain with 11,324 and Germany with 8,173.

The majority of deaths were of people over the age of 80, the study said.

Around 63 per cent of those who died due to the heat were women, the analysis said.

The difference became more stark over the age of 80, when women had a mortality rate 27 per cent higher than men.

Previous research has shown that Europe is warming at twice the global average.

While the world has warmed an average of nearly 1.20ºC since the mid-1800s, last year Europe was around 2.3ºC hotter than pre-industrial times.

Unless something is done to protect people against rising temperatures, by 2030 Europe will face an average of more than 68,000 heat-related deaths every summer, the new study estimated.

By 2040, there would be an average of more than 94,000 heat-linked deaths — and by 2050, the number could rise to over 120,000, the researchers said.

“These predictions are based on the current level of vulnerability and future temperatures,” Achebak said.

“If we take very effective measures, that vulnerability can be reduced,” he added.

Raquel Nunes, a health and climate expert at the UK’s Warwick University not involved in the research, said the study “highlights the urgent need for action to protect vulnerable populations from the impacts of heatwaves”.

Chloe Brimicombe, a climate scientist at Austria’s University of Graz, said it “demonstrates that heat prevention strategies need to be reevaluated, with gender and age especially in mind”.

 

Uzbek president cements power with election win

By - Jul 10,2023 - Last updated at Jul 10,2023

Uzbekistan’s President and presidential candidate Shavkat Mirziyoyev votes in the country’s presidential election in Tashkent, on Sunday (AFP photo)

TASHKENT — Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev won a third term that will keep him in charge of the tightly controlled country until 2030 as international observers said Monday the vote lacked “genuine” competition.

Mirziyoyev, who was running against three largely unknown candidates, won Sunday’s election with 87 per cent of the vote, according to preliminary results.

A constitutional referendum this year paved the way for the 65-year-old to serve two more presidential terms and increased the mandate from five years to seven, meaning he could stay in power until 2037.

“Uzbekistan’s presidential election lacked genuine political competition despite some efforts to reform,” an election monitoring mission from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), said in a statement.

They also said that a number of recommendations key to the democratic process “remain unaddressed”.

Urszula Gacek, the head of the mission, said her organisation urged the country to “take bolder measures towards a true democracy that includes all citizens”.

 

Greetings from Putin, Xi 

 

A former Soviet republic, Uzbekistan is wedged between Russia and China and shares a border with Afghanistan.

Mirziyoyev portrays himself as a reformer creating a “New Uzbekistan” and has said he wants to double gross domestic product to $160 billion soon.

He has promised to open up Uzbekistan to foreign investment and tourism and implement major reforms in Central Asia’s most populous country.

He focused his reelection campaign on the economy and education.

Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated Mirziyoyev on a “convincing electoral victory”.

The win “confirms your high political authority and points to the broad, popular support for your policy of large-scale reforms” , he wrote.

The two also spoke on the phone and discussed their “strategic partnership”.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping also congratulated Mirziyoyev in a phone call.

“Xi Jinping pointed out, in recent years, under our joint leadership, China-Uzbekistan relations have achieved breakthrough development, and cooperation in various fields has been comprehensively strengthened,” state broadcaster CCTV said.

Xi told Mirziyoyev he “very much cherishes the good working relationship and personal friendship with you”, CCTV added.

In May, Xi hosted Mirziyoyev and other Central Asian leaders for a summit in the northern Chinese city of Xi’an.

 

No sign of opposition 

 

Many voters said they were happy with the outcome but hoped to see positive change down the road.

Dilafruz Khamidova, 24, said she was “happy” with the election result, adding she wanted to see “more opportunities for women in the future”.

Dilorom Karimova, a 51-year-old housewife, said she wanted salaries to match the cost of living.

It was also important to solve the “problem of unemployment in the regions”, she said.

Mirziyoyev, who trained as an engineer, previously served as prime minister under his hardline predecessor Islam Karimov before winning his first term in 2016 and getting reelected in 2021.

He has ended the practice of forced labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton fields and released political prisoners jailed during Karimov’s quarter-century rule.

NGOs say human rights are better than under Karimov but there is still much to improve, and the authorities have shown no sign of allowing a real opposition to emerge.

The OSCE said the campaign has been “low-key, mirroring lack of opposition to the incumbent”.

In July 2022, protests erupted over a plan to remove the right to self-determination from the region of Karakalpakstan.

The unrest and subsequent crackdown in the poor north-western territory left at least 21 people dead.

Suspect in Channel drowning of 27 jailed in France — judiciary source

By - Jul 10,2023 - Last updated at Jul 10,2023

PARIS, France — A key suspect in the 2021 drowning deaths of at least 27 people trying cross the Channel in a dinghy has been charged in France, a judiciary source said on Monday.

He was extradited on Friday by Britain, where he had been arrested, to face trial in France, and charged a day later, the source said.

AFP was unable to reach his lawyer for comment.

Harem Ahmed Abwbaker, 32, is alleged to be a “significant member of the organised crime group who conspired to transport the migrants to the UK in a small boat”, the British National Crime Agency (NCA) said earlier.

NCA investigators have been working with the French authorities to track down those responsible for the tragedy.

It was the worst accident in the Channel since the narrow strait became a key route for migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia attempting to reach England from France.

The flimsy vessel sank on November 24, 2021 after leaving the French coast, leading to the death of all but two of those aboard. Four remain missing.

Among the 27 — aged seven to 47 — were 16 Iraqi Kurds, four Afghans, three Ethiopians, one Somali, one Egyptian and one Vietnamese migrant.

British police arrested the suspect three days after the disaster and launched extradition proceedings.

Charges in France, where he will face trial, include manslaughter, endangering the lives of others, and facilitating illegal immigration.

The Paris-based national unit against organised crime has been tasked with the investigation.

The UK has seen record numbers of migrants making the perilous cross-Channel journey to reach its shores.

More than 12,700 people have made the crossing this year so far, according to latest government figures.

Heavy rains and flooding pummel US northeast, one dead

By - Jul 10,2023 - Last updated at Jul 10,2023

A road is damaged as water in a creek rushes after heavy rainfall in Cornwall-On-Hudson, New York, on Monday (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — The north-eastern United States was inundated on Monday with heavy rain and flooding across several states a day after storms and flash floods washed out highways and killed one person in New York state.

Parts of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Vermont were under flood warnings, with states in the region recording rapid rainfall and “life threatening” flash floods, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

Heavy rains in New York state on Sunday turned streets into raging waterways, washing out bridges, leaving roads impassable and leading Governor Kathy Hochul to declare states of emergency in two counties.

The Orange County Emergency Management office on Monday confirmed that a 35-year-old woman had died in Highland Falls, in New York’s Hudson Valley, where “historic floods” caused significant damage.

Hochul said the woman was swept to her death in a flash flood in the valley as she tried to evacuate her damaged house with her dog.

“Her fiance literally saw her swept away,” the governor told reporters on Monday.

On Sunday Hochul said that up to 200 mm of rain had created “life threatening conditions due to flash flooding”.

On Sunday evening, more than 12,000 customers had lost electricity in the state, but by midday Monday that figure had dropped to 3,800, according to poweroutage.us.

Amtrak rail service was suspended between New York City and state capital Albany “due to severe weather conditions” as of 5:30am, the company said in a statement.

Hochul said the rains appeared to be heading east to Vermont where law enforcement earlier reported severe rain in four counties, with several roads washed out and closed.

“The expected rainfall rate is 0.25 to 0.5 inches in 1 hour,” NWS said in a state alert. “Flash flooding is already occurring” and “catastrophic flooding” was expected Monday in parts of the Vermont.

Governor Phil Scott declared a state of emergency.

“Swiftwater rescue teams have been staged in strategic locations throughout the state, should they be necessary to help with evacuations and rescues from floodwaters,” Scott’s office said in a statement on Sunday.

The heavy rains washed out and closed highways, and stranded people in their cars and homes. Search and rescue teams were operating in several locations, according to various media reports.

NWS said it had received “multiple reports” of significant flooding and of persons trapped in vehicles in Orange County.

“Several additional inches of rainfall is expected through Tuesday morning as this system slowly moves eastward” and more flash flooding is possible, it said on Monday.

Scientists say that climate change intensifies the risk of heavy rain because a warmer atmosphere holds more water.

 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF