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Floods in Portugal close major highway and force 3,000 residents to evacuate

A part of Portugal's main highway collapsed Wednesday night, after a levee had broken beneath it. Heavy?rains and flooding have been pounding the country for weeks. Authorities evacuated 3,000 people in the northern region.

The levee on the River Mondego near Coimbra, the medieval city, burst right next to a pillar that supports the A1 highway connecting the cities of Lisbon to Porto. This caused a gap in the road, which had been closed by the police.

Floods have caused serious problems in Coimbra and its surrounding towns. Some are isolated... She told RTP that the situation was extremely unstable.

Luis Montenegro, the Prime Minister of Montenegro, told reporters that authorities "were at the limit of their capacity to contain this water". Since late January, a series of deadly storms have ravaged central and southern parts. They've blown roofs off homes, flooded several towns, and left hundreds of thousands without power for days.

At least 15 deaths have been reported as a result of the storms. This includes?indirect casualties. Montenegro was overseeing the?emergency response in Coimbra after Interior Minister Maria Lucia Amaral had resigned due to criticism by opposition parties and local community members over what they called the authorities' failure and slow response following Storm Kristin, which devastated Coimbra two weeks ago.

The storms have ceased this week and a new weather phenomenon, known as "atmospheric rivers", a corridor of concentrated water vapour bringing massive amounts of moist from the tropics, has brought downpours to the north.

Risk of DAM Overflow

The municipal authorities of Coimbra, Portugal ordered the evacuation of 3,000 people who were most at risk due to the river's bursting banks on Tuesday evening. On Wednesday, the operation was still in progress. Police were making checks at residents' doors and transporting them to shelters.

Carlos Tavares, Regional Civil?Protection Official, said that rain could cause Aguieira Dam, 35 km northeast from Coimbra to "overflow, sweep levees away and trigger further floods".

The Portuguese environment agency APA expects "exceptional peak flows" in the Mondego river through Saturday.

The city hall reported that a part of Coimbra’s ancient city 'wall', located on a hillside, in one of Europe's earliest university towns, and a UNESCO World Heritage Site collapsed. This caused the closure of the market and the road below.

Authorities evacuated Porto Brandao, a village in central Portugal located just across the Tagus River from Lisbon. This was due to the possibility of landslides. A landslide near the beachside community of Caparica forced around 30 people to evacuate their homes. (Sergio Goncalves contributed additional reporting from Lisbon; Andrei Khalip wrote the article; Alex Richardson, Lincoln Feast and Alex Richardson edited it.)

(source: Reuters)