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Thousands protest in Valencia over lack of schools after deadly floods

Families and instructors protested in Valencia on Saturday to require action over schools damaged by the fatal floods that killed over 220 people in eastern Spain and impacted thousands of children's education.

Holding posters requiring the resignation of Valencian leader Carlos Mazon, protesters marched through the Spanish city almost a month after the country's worst natural disaster in decades on Oct. 29.

Debate over the local government's handling of the floods still raves, and a teachers' union accused it of leaving the clean-up to instructors and pupils.

Five individuals stay missing out on in the Valencia area after torrential rains and flooding drowned individuals in vehicles and underground parking area, and collapsed homes.

Thirty schools were still closed, the regional instructors' union STEPV stated, leaving 13,000 children with no place to discover.

About 5,000 people attended the demonstration, the Spanish federal government stated.

We feel deserted due to the fact that, instructors, parents and volunteers have had to tidy up the schools. We have actually seen cleaners in some schools but insufficient, STEPV spokesperson Marc Candela told Reuters.

A Valencian regional federal government spokesperson said considering that Nov. 11, about 32,000 trainees from flood-hit areas have actually gone back to school.

Amazing cleansing jobs are being carried out in academic centres, Daniel McEvoy, Valencian education minister, stated.

Mazon has actually been implicated of sending flood warnings to citizens too late.

He has confessed he had actually made errors however refused to resign and stated the body accountable for measuring water circulations, run by the national federal government, failed to send out enough cautions.

(source: Reuters)