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Polish army to remain in flood-hit towns ‘as long as needed’

Photo: PAP/Michał Meissner
An extra 5,000 to 6,000 soldiers would take part in the new special operation. Photo: PAP/Michał Meissner
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Polish soldiers and emergency services will remain in flood-affected towns until residents’ lives return to normal, Defense Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz has said.

Swathes of Poland’s southwest have been devastated by massive flooding that started on Friday, leading to seven deaths.

The country’s third-largest city, Wrocław in the southwest, was on tenterhooks on Thursday with residents hoping it would escape major damage.

The water level, while still high, has not resulted in major flooding on the city’s streets, but three beach bars in districts to the south have been submerged.

Soldiers and civilian volunteers built rows of walls made of sandbags to secure buildings and streets against flooding of the Bystrzyca, a tributary of the major Oder river.

Reuters later reported that the city appears so far to have withstood the flood wave.

Across the affected regions, the government has mobilized thousands of rescue and security services personnel in response to the disaster.

Speaking on Thursday in Nysa, a southwestern town that has witnessed some of the worst devastation, Kosiniak-Kamysz said that soldiers and emergency services would remain in flood-affected towns until the aftermath is cleared and life returns to normal.

“The army will stay in each town for as long as needed,” he said.

Operation ‘Feniks’

He also announced the launch of a special government operation aimed at rebuilding flood-ravaged regions.

The drive, called “Feniks,” will be conducted in multiple phases and is scheduled to run until December 31. After that, it could be extended.

Kosiniak-Kamysz, who is also a deputy prime minister, said that an extra 5,000 to 6,000 soldiers would take part in the operation, in addition to the 16,000 already stationed in flood-hit areas, bringing the total figure close to 20,000. He also announced the formation of a Territorial Defense Forces unit in the southwestern Opole region, which will be stationed in Nysa.

Repairing infrastructure

Kosiniak-Kamysz also vowed that Głuchołazy, another flood-struck town, would see its destroyed bridges restored in the days to come. He said that before constructing temporary bridges, engineering troops are working to clear and prepare the area, adding: “This is the most difficult part of this project.”
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