Germany to pay rapid emergency aid for flood victims

By IANS | Published: July 22, 2021 01:48 PM2021-07-22T13:48:04+5:302021-07-22T13:55:18+5:30

Berlin, July 22 Germany will pay 400 million euros ($470 million) for victims of last week's devastating floods ...

Germany to pay rapid emergency aid for flood victims | Germany to pay rapid emergency aid for flood victims

Germany to pay rapid emergency aid for flood victims

Berlin, July 22 Germany will pay 400 million euros ($470 million) for victims of last week's devastating floods as part of a rapid emergency aid, Minister of Finance Olaf Scholz announced.

It was necessary to quickly send the message to people in the affected areas "that there is a future, that we care together, that this is a matter for us as a whole country, that we are helping", Scholz also the Vice Chancellor, said in a press conference on Wednesday.

Last week, catastrophic floods caused by intense rainfall blocked roads and highways, cut off electricity and swept away entire houses, reports Xinhua news agency.

North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate were hit particularly hard, with at least 170 people being killed and many still missing.

Half of the 400 million euros of rapid aid payments, which could be further extended unbureaucratically, were made available from the federal budget and half from the states.

"If it is the case that more is needed, we will pay more," Scholz said.

In addition, after an initial assessment of the damage by the end of July, reconstruction funds for the infrastructure should also be made available in a timely manner, which could probably run into the billions, according to Scholz.

Asked whether a distinction should be made between who had insurance and who did not when paying out money to rebuild destroyed homes, Scholz said he advocated "not being cynical and not being heartless".

It was a "question of solidarity," he added.

Nevertheless, a possible obligation to provide natural disaster insurance for homeowners also had to be debated in the future, because there would be "ever more violent natural events at ever shorter intervals", Minister of the Interior Horst Seehofer said at the same press conference.

As an industrialised country, Germany also had a great responsibility to achieve CO2 neutrality and to develop sustainable technologies, Scholz said.

"Man-made climate change must be stopped."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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