News / International
Severe flood warnings for the UK
25 Nov 2012 at 06:27hrs | Views
London - A woman was killed by a falling tree in southwest England, police said on Sunday, as severe flood warnings were introduced in parts of the country already soaked by rain and battered by strong winds.
The unnamed woman was taken to hospital, but died later, after a tree fell on her late on Saturday in Exeter, Devon and Cornwall police said. Two other people were said to have been injured in the incident.
Cornwall in southwest England was the main focus of fears for life and property as rivers threatened to burst their banks and residents reported surges of floodwater coursing through picturesque towns.
Severe flood warnings - which the Environment Agency classifies as meaning there is a risk to life - were in place in the Cornish towns of Helston and Perranporth as well as in the pretty fishing port of Polperro.
Alan Crockford, a pub landlord in Polperro, said there had been warnings but "nobody knew it would get this bad".
He told the BBC: "I was actually in my house and I heard a roar, and just looked outside the window and that was the first bit of water that just... came down the hill, like a river running straight down the road."
Rail operators said many services in southwest England were disrupted due to landslides and flooding.
The Environment Agency has more than 100 less acute flood warnings in place in England and Wales as forecasters warn that more rain is on its way after days of downpours.
The unnamed woman was taken to hospital, but died later, after a tree fell on her late on Saturday in Exeter, Devon and Cornwall police said. Two other people were said to have been injured in the incident.
Cornwall in southwest England was the main focus of fears for life and property as rivers threatened to burst their banks and residents reported surges of floodwater coursing through picturesque towns.
Severe flood warnings - which the Environment Agency classifies as meaning there is a risk to life - were in place in the Cornish towns of Helston and Perranporth as well as in the pretty fishing port of Polperro.
Alan Crockford, a pub landlord in Polperro, said there had been warnings but "nobody knew it would get this bad".
He told the BBC: "I was actually in my house and I heard a roar, and just looked outside the window and that was the first bit of water that just... came down the hill, like a river running straight down the road."
Rail operators said many services in southwest England were disrupted due to landslides and flooding.
The Environment Agency has more than 100 less acute flood warnings in place in England and Wales as forecasters warn that more rain is on its way after days of downpours.
Source - Sapa