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Friday, June 3, 2016
Paris flood getting to something else
Floodwaters in Paris continue to rise with the River Seine due to hit a peak of up to 6.5m (21ft) later on Friday.
The world-famous Louvre and Orsay museums have been closed so staff can move priceless artworks to safety.
The number of dead in the floods has now risen to at least 15 - 10 in southern Germany, two each in France and Romania and one in Belgium.
More downpours are forecast for the weekend across a band of central Europe from France to Ukraine.
Several towns in southern Germany have been devastated. Belgium, Austria, the Netherlands and Poland have also been affected.
Thousands of people have been forced from their homes.
Image copyrightAP
Image caption
Artworks are packed away for safe-keeping at the Louvre
French President Francois Hollande said the weather was a serious climate phenomenon and a global challenge.
He is to declare a state of natural disaster in the worst-hit areas, which will free up emergency funds.
In Paris, emergency barriers have been put up along the Seine, a number of bridges have been closed and tourists boats have been banned from sailing on the river.
The current floods are eclipsed by the 1910 floods that saw Paris submerged for two months.
During the 1910 floods, engineers built wooden walkways for people to navigate flooded streets
The Seine - which has risen to six metres - has not reached current levels in Paris since 1982, according to the environment ministry.
It previously reached 6.18m in 1982, 7.1m in 1955 and 8.62m in 1910.
It is expected to reach at least 6.3m this evening local time and 6.5m in a "worst-case scenario", the ministry said, with the water level remaining at those levels throughout the weekend.
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