Russia's emergencies minister today accused local officials of not doing enough to prevent 171 deaths in weekend floods as President Vladimir declared a day of national mourning today.
Relatives are preparing to bury their dead in Krymsk, the southern mountain town that was worst hit by floods that caught many of the victims unawares as they slept on Friday night.
Refrigerated trucks held the bodies of some of the victims behind a hospital in Krymsk, where survivors gathered to identify the last of the dead.Postmen in the badly damaged town of 57,000 people went from house to house, handing out sums of 10,000 roubles (€246), with the promise of more compensation to come.
Mr Putin, who was criticised for responding too slowly to national disasters early in his first spell as president, quickly flew to Krymsk on Saturday to show he was in control and ordered an inquiry into the high death toll.
Some residents say the wall of water that swept through Krymsk was so high that the gates of a nearby reservoir must have been opened.
However, Emergencies Minister Vladimir Puchkov has dismissed these suggestions but said mistakes were made in failing to ensure residents were warned quickly enough. A criminal investigation has been opened."
According to a preliminary appraisal, warnings were made but unfortunately not all the work was carried out properly. Mistakes were allowed by local leaders and various services," he said in televised comments."Not all the population was warned in time," he said.
Residents said the floods upended trees and drowned livestock, lifting the carcasses and carrying them on the waters rushing through city streets. Officials said they were collecting animal corpses and destroying them to prevent disease from spreading in the aftermath of the floods.
"We were barely able to get out of our house and started screaming down the street for help. But we weren't able to save our things. We saw the water carry away the roof of our house," said one woman.
The floods followed more than a month of heavy rainfall in the relatively wealthy southern "breadbasket" region of Krasnodar, where agriculture and tourism thrive. Officials, who raised the death toll to 171 late on Sunday, were expecting more rains in the Krasnodar region today, although it was sunny and hot in Krymsk.
Torrential rain, equivalent to a third of the annual average rainfall in some places, temporarily paralysed transport and briefly halted exports from the port of Novorossiisk, Russia's biggest commercial port.
Reuters