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After a year, the leader of Spain's Valencia Region resigns due to deadly floods

Carlos Mazon, leader of Spain's eastern Valencia Region, announced on Monday that he would be stepping down due to the way his administration handled the catastrophic floods which swept through the region one year ago.

Mazon is under constant pressure to resign, especially from the relatives of victims, ever since the torrential rains on October 29, 2024, which killed 229 and caused billions in damages in Valencia, Spain's 3rd largest city.

Mazon said to reporters that he "can't continue anymore" after an intensely critical speech where he criticized the response of the national government to the crisis.

He didn't say whether he would call a snap vote, or if he would also resign from his regional assembly seat - ending his parliamentary immunity. Nor did he specify who his interim replacement will be.

Residents in the affected area accuse the regional authorities of having issued an alert too late, after many buildings had already been submerged and people drowned in the worst floods in Europe since 1967.

Mazon resigned on the day Maribel Vilaplana - a journalist in the area with whom he had lunch the day before the floods - was scheduled to testify at a hearing investigating the criminal liability of authorities for the deaths.

(source: Reuters)