• 09/17/2024

    Prime Minister Petr Fiala said the government would establish a working group which will consider how to allocate state funds to help municipalities repair the damage caused by the floods. The working group will be chaired by Finance Minister Zbyněk Stanjura, who said he was not ruling out the possibility of amending the state budget for this year, depending on the extent of the damage caused, which he estimates to be in the tens of billions of crowns.

    The prime minister also confirmed that the State Material Reserves Administration would provide equipment needed for relief and clean-up efforts directly to municipalities and basic aid to individuals who had lost everything in the floods. This will involve drinking water tankers, especially for smaller municipalities that will have to deal with contamination of water sources, power generators, dryers, tents and blankets.

  • 09/16/2024

    Prime Minister Petr Fiala (Civic Democratic Party) confirmed that the upcoming elections to regional councils and one-third of the Senate scheduled for this weekend will take place as planned. Following an extraordinary meeting of the government on its response to the flood crisis, the prime minister said that he firmly believed it was possible to overcome the complications of organizing the elections in the flood-hit regions. He assured voters that the Interior Ministry was already working on an action plan to help bring this about.

    Earlier on Monday, Environment Minister Petr Hladik (Christian Democrats) said that in areas where it will not be possible to open polling stations on Friday and Saturday due to flooding or clean-up work, the ballots could be collected by specially assigned teams of volunteers. The regional and Senate elections are due to take place on Friday from 2pm till 10pm and on Saturday between 8 am and 2pm.

  • 09/16/2024

    Firefighters have already rescued almost 500 people, including children, from Ostrava-Privoz, where evacuations began on Monday morning. A fifty-meters-long crack appeared in the dam at the confluence of the Opava and Odra rivers, letting out a stream of 100 cubic metres of water per second that directly threatened parts of Ostrava. The evacuations continued on Monday evening with boats and a helicopter.  The evacuees are being transported by buses to an evacuation centre the town has set up at Černá louka. On Monday evening firemen managed to close part of the opening in the dam with 200 sandbags.

    While water levels have started receding in some areas, 194 places in the Czech Republic remain on high flood alert. South Bohemia is now most at risk.

  • 09/16/2024

    As the country battles against extreme floods, Prime Minister Petr Fiala has stressed the need to restore electricity supplies, the communications network and repair damaged roads as soon as possible. On a visit to some of the hardest-hit regions together with Interior Minister Vít Rakušan, the prime minister thanked firefighters, the rescue services and volunteers for the recue and relief efforts underway. "It is premature to estimate the damages; the state and local governments must now concentrate their efforts on the rapid restoration of the damaged infrastructure," Petr Fiala said. The interior minister said deliveries of tankers with drinking water to the flood-affected areas must be accelerated, and the primary needs of citizens must be taken care of.

  • 09/16/2024

    Czechs have started contributing money in aid of those affected by the floods. A number of charity organizations have opened accounts for this purpose including People in Need, the Czech Red Cross, Charita Czech Republic and ADRA. People can also help by donating to Czech food banks.

  • 09/16/2024

    The first attempt at looting in the areas affected by the floods has been reported from the Moravian-Silesian Region. According to the police it was an isolated case of looting on the premises of a private company in Ostrava. Moravian-Silesian Governor Josef Bělica has sharply condemned the incident and saying that such crimes merit the harshest penalties.

  • 09/16/2024

    Tuesday should be partly cloudy with rain in the southern and western parts of the country and day temperatures between 17 and 21 degrees Celsius.

  • 09/16/2024

    The Ministry of Interior is preparing a manual to help conduct the upcoming elections to regional councils and one-third of the Senate this weekend, Environment Minister Petr Hladik told reporters on Monday after a meeting of the Flood Control Commission. He said that postponing the elections would only be possible via a change of legislation, for which there is not much time. The minister said that in areas where it will not be possible to open polling stations on Friday and Saturday due to flooding or clean-up work, the ballots could be collected by specially assigned teams of volunteers. The regional and Senate elections are due to take place on Friday from 2pm till 10pm and on Saturday between 8 am and 2pm.

  • 09/16/2024

    While water levels have started receding in some areas, over 200 places in the Czech Republic remain on flood alert, one-third of them on the highest flood warning level. The situation is reported to be critical in several places - on the Chrudimka River, Opava River and the Odra River.

    A fifty-meters-long crack appeared in the dam at the confluence of the Opava and Odra rivers, letting out a stream of 100 cubic metres of water per second and directly threatening Ostrava and Opava, parts of which were flooded. Ostrava has started evacuating inhabitants from some areas of the city. Litovel in the Olomouc Region was flooded on Monday morning and there are fears the situation could worsen in Olomouc and several location in the South Moravian Region.

    The situation has worsened severely in South Bohemia where the highest flood level warning is in force in 13 places, and according to forecasts the belt of rain will move westwards. Forecasts predict  rain not only on Monday, but also on Tuesday and possibly Wednesday. Firefighters and emergency crews are on stand-by for evacuation.

  • 09/16/2024

    Around 118,000 households in the Czech Republic were without electricity on Monday due to the floods and strong winds. This is down slightly from the reported 135,000 power outages on Sunday evening. Although power companies are working to restore supplies as fast as possible, fresh outages have been reported in the course of the day due to more damaged power lines. In some places this has complicated evacuation efforts and communication with the public. The worst situation remains in the Moravia-Silesia Region, where 73,000 households are without power, and in the Olomouc Region, with 29,000 households without power.

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