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Woman washed away by Storm Leonardo in Spain, man drowned in Portugal

On Thursday, Storm Leonardo lashed the Iberian Peninsula with torrential rainfall, prompting "more" flood warnings. A man died in a deluge while attempting to save his dog, and Spanish rescuers were searching for a woman who was swept by a river when she tried saving her pet.

Leonardo is one of a half dozen winter storms that have hit Portugal and Spain in the past five years. Several people were killed, roofs were ripped off and towns flooded.

Scientists say that flooding is becoming more common in Europe due to climate changes. The atmosphere is warming and retaining more moisture. In October 2024, 237 people died in Spain's Valencia Region due to unprecedented flash floods.

Authorities in Portugal said that a man aged around 70 years old died Wednesday after his car was swept off a road near a dam on a flood-prone area.

Authorities in southern Spain's Malaga Province searched for a woman who was dragged by the Turvilla River as she tried to save her dog. Yesterday, we spent all day and night searching. Manuel Marmolejo, Malaga's fire chief, said on Spanish TV that they found the dog but not the woman.

"At First, We Thought It Was an Earthquake"

The authorities ordered the evacuations of Grazalema’s 1,500 residents after water began to seep through the walls and steep streets of this popular mountain village.

We were terrified. We thought at first it was an earthquake but it wasn't. The creaking was what we heard. Maria Fernandez said, "It was an awful night," as she swept the water out of her home. Juan Manuel Moreno of the regional government in Andalusia said that Grazalema received as much rain in 16-hours as the Madrid region receives in an entire year.

Two reservoirs located down the mountainside from Grazalema?were in danger of overflowing. He said that authorities planned to drain the reservoirs.

People in southern Portugal waded up to their waists through Alcacer do Sal when the river Sado broke its banks. Sandbags were stacked up in front of the doors of homes and shops to protect them from flooding.

Anabela Ramalho said that everything was destroyed in the nursing home.

She said, "Only walls remain." "There is a feeling that we can't do anything... "I don't recall seeing anything like that."

Aemet, the state weather agency, predicts that Storm Marta will hit the region this weekend. Reporting by Jon Nazca, Miguel Pereira, and Emma Pinedo, in Gdansk; and Charlie Devereux and Alexandra Hudson, in Lisbon.

(source: Reuters)