Storm Desmond: Man dies as wind and rain lashes Britain

Environment Agency made 130 flood warnings with Cumbria worst affected

A rescue team helps to evacuate people from their homes after Storm Desmond caused flooding  in Carlisle, England. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images.
A rescue team helps to evacuate people from their homes after Storm Desmond caused flooding in Carlisle, England. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images.

A man died as Storm Desmond lashed Britain, bringing strong winds and heavy rain which caused Cumbria to declare a major incident.

The Environment Agency made 130 flood warnings, while residents in some areas were evacuated from their homes and there were a number of road crashes involving heavy goods vehicles.

A 90-year-old man who died is believed to have been blown into the side of a moving bus by a gust of wind, near Finchley Central Tube station, north London, a Scotland Yard spokesman said.

Rain continued to fall overnight in Scotland, northern England and northern parts of Wales, and is likely to continue for a few hours yet, forecasters said. Some areas saw more than a month’s worth of rain over 24 hours.

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The downpour left streets looking more like rivers as rescue teams set off in rubber dinghies to help stranded locals. Many remain underwater, while some have been left covered in mud and debris.

Cumbria was among the worst affected by the rain, with the village of Braithwaite completely cut off when its main bridge, the Coledale High Bridge, collapsed as the river burst its banks.

In Carlisle, flood levels continued to rise and helicopters carried out rescue missions overnight as cars became almost entirely submerged. Military forces have been called in to help evacuate people who wish to move, including elderly people, pets and families with babies.

Extra doctors

The British Red Cross teams set up rest centres in Keswick, Appleby and Kendal, while medical groups issued an urgent call to draft in extra doctors amid fears the storm could cause casualties.

Adrian Holme, from Cumbria Fire and Rescue Service, told the BBC the flood was “unprecedented” and “exceptionally challenging” as more than 100 people were evacuated from Keswick.

He said it was “absolutely devastating”, adding: “The flood defences that were built here in 2012 haven’t been breached, they have been over-topped. We have had 24 hours of constant rain.”

Power supplies were also seriously affected and at least 55,000 homes in Lancaster, Morecambe, Carnforth will continue to face cuts for a number of days after flood defences protecting a major substation were breached overnight.

Electricity North West said another 4,000 properties were without power across Cumbria as flooding continued to cause further faults.

A fire and rescue crew had to save a member of the public who was found clinging to a tree after they tried to reach a horse stranded in a flooded field in Northumberland, while fire services in Lancashire responded to more than 300 calls for help, including road traffic collisions and two fires.

The cross-Tyne Shields ferry Spirit of the Tyne was rescued by Tynemouth RNLI lifeboat volunteers in a dramatic mission on Saturday night after the ferry’s engine failed on its final crossing of the night from North to South Shields.

As the lifeboat was being launched the Port of Tyne pilot launch Collingwood managed to evacuate the small number of passengers from the ferry, leaving just the skipper who was desperately trying to get the ferry’s engine restarted. No injuries were reported.

PA