22nd January 2025
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Regional president of Valencia admits to ‘mistakes’ in handling flood disaster, but refuses to resign

Carlos Mazón, the head of the Valencia regional government, admitted on Friday to ‘mistakes’ in handling the country’s deadliest flood in decades that killed 216 people there. He also apologised.

The 29 October disaster claimed 224 lives nationwide. The floods wrecked infrastructure, gutted buildings and submerged fields. The final bill is expected to soar to tens of billions of euros. ALSO READ: Sánchez announces a further €3.8bn in flood aid as anger at leaders grows.

‘I’m not going to deny mistakes,’ Mazón told Valencia’s regional parliament, adding he was ‘not going to shirk any responsibility’.

As the head of the regional government ‘I would like to apologise’ to those who ‘felt’ that ‘the aid did not arrive or was not enough’, he added.

As he spoke, dozens of protesters gathered outside the building, jeering and chanting slogans demanding his resignation and calling him a liar.

Almost half the people killed in Valencia were 70 years old or older and 26 were foreigners, including two Britons.

Outrage at the authorities for their perceived mismanagement before and after the floods triggered mass protests on Saturday, the largest in Valencia city which drew 130,000 people. ALSO READ: Over 130,000 march in Valencia to protest handling of deadly floods.

Several carried placards that read: ‘Our hands are stained with mud, theirs with blood.’

Critics have questioned the efficiency of the Valencia region’s alert system. In some cases residents were only contacted on telephone when floodwater was already gushing through towns.

The emergency alert was only sent after 8pm, nearly 13 hours after the Spanish state’s weather agency (AEMET) warned of the risk of ‘very intense’ rain.

The head of Valencia’s emergency department admitted she did not learn it was possible to send such warnings until the evening of the first day of the floods.

Under Spain’s decentralised system of government, regional governments lead disaster response.

Spain’s socialist (PSOE)-led central government has said Mazón’s administration, run by the right-wing People’s Party (PP), bore responsibility for not issuing the alert earlier.

Mazón has also come under fire for having been missing for several critical hours on the afternoon of the disaster when it was already raining heavily.

In response to repeated questions for explanations for his absence, he finally admitted he had been having lunch with a journalist to offer her the directorship of Valencia’s regional television station.

Many residents have complained hey were left without food and water for days and had to rely on aid provided by volunteers instead of the government. ALSO READ: Spanish royals, PM and regional president pelted with mud by flood survivors.

Ignoring calls to resign, Mazón repeated on Friday a previous assertion that a national body responsible for measuring river flows had provided insufficient warnings, and said the magnitude of the deluge was hard to foresee.

ALSO READ: Search for those still missing after floods also moves to Valencia coastline.

ALSO READ: Bodies found of two young brothers, two weeks after flash floods in Valencia.

ALSO READ: Destruction caused by Valencia floods to cost state and insurance sector over €10 billion.

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