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Seine flooding forces evacuation of homeless camp in Paris

A homeless camp on the banks of the flooded river Seine in Paris was evacuated overnight as waters rose – but experts say the peak of the flood has now passed.

Seine flooding forces evacuation of homeless camp in Paris
Floods in Paris (Photo by Guillaume BAPTISTE / AFP)

The camp, recently set up under the Pont de Sully, in the fifth arrondissement, was cleared as waters rose 10cm on Tuesday, peaking at 4.03m before starting to recede. At 9am on Wednesday, water levels had fallen below the 4m mark, at 3.99m. 

Léa Filoche, deputy mayor responsible for solidarity and emergency accommodation, estimated that “there were more than 400 homeless people living on the river banks” in the capital. She called for “rapid emergency shelter for people living on the quays”.

Quays were flooded under the Alexandre-III bridge (seventh and eighth arrondissements), with the river twice as high as usual in Paris. 

Several roads along the river bank have been closed for safety reasons, including stretches between Pont Royal and Pont de l’Alma, the portion between the Tuileries and voie Mazas, and between the Pont du Garigliano and the Pont de Bir Hakeim.

Vigilance will remain high over the coming days, despite the overnight fall in water levels, but the expectation is that the Seine floods in the capital will not break any records. In January 2018, levels reached 5.88m above normal, and rose as high as 6.10m in June 2016. 

In January 1910, floods reached a record 8.62m.

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PARIS

Phone alert surprises Parisians ahead of Olympics

Sudden emergency alerts about this summer's Paris Olympics flashed up on mobile phones across the French capital on Monday night, sparking alarm and surprise on social media and disrupting a parliament speech by the interior minister.

Phone alert surprises Parisians ahead of Olympics

The message from the government — entitled “Extremely serious alert” and accompanied by a loud ringing tone, even on phones in silent mode — popped up on devices at 8:00 pm.

“IMPORTANT: message from the interior ministry concerning the security perimeter for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games,” the alert said.

It urged “residents, employees, shopkeepers, hotel and restaurant guests” to connect to a platform and obtain a QR code that would allow them to access the secured area.

It said the security measures would be in place from July 18 to July 26 — the day the Games are due to start.

The alert was sent out during peak evening hours “to reach as many people as possible”, officials said.

It even disrupted a verbal joust in parliament between Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin and members of the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party.

The Paris Games are due to kick off on July 26th with an unprecedented opening ceremony on the River Seine that will require one of the biggest security operations in French history.

“This is not a test,” the interior ministry said.

“An exceptional event requires exceptional action.”

Darmanin, who is in charge of the Olympics security operation, was interrupted during a speech when his phone and others in parliament all started pinging at once.

The minister tried to switch off his phone and resume his speech amid laughter from the opposition, forcing the speaker of parliament, Yael Braun-Pivet, to intervene.

“There is an alert and nobody can hear you!” she said.

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