France
The river Seine in Paris has swollen to its highest level in more than 30 years.
Battered by days of heavy rainfall, water levels in the centre of the French capital rose above six metres, swamping small quayside businesses and forcing two of the city’s metro stations to close.
For now, the river remains well below the record highs of 1910 – that saw the Seine top 8.6 metres.
Two of Paris’ most famous landmarks, however, were not taking any chances. Both the Orsay and the Louvre museums were shut to the public on Friday as staff desperately scrambled to move priceless artefacts from lower floors to higher-ground.
Teams are working hard at
— Elodie's Paris (Paris_by_Elodie) June 3, 2016MuseeLouvre
to keep the art dry. Everything is safe. Museum closed today.#flood pic.twitter.com/hFyTpwKMju
Please note:
— Elodie's Paris (Paris_by_Elodie) June 3, 2016MuseeOrsay
to remain closed until Tuesday June7.#flood pic.twitter.com/qXAWw9HywA
Dozens of swanky properties in Paris’ chic 16th arrondissement were also submerged.
French insurance firms fear the total cost of the flooding could be more than 600 million euros.
Some of the hardest hit areas continue to lie just south of the capital.
In the suburb of Villeneuve-Saint-Georges troops were sent in to help stranded residents.
With more heavy rain predicted, water levels are not expected to go down anytime soon.
00:50
Kenya: 44 people die due to flooding
01:02
Pics of the day: April 25, 2024
01:40
Nairobi residents grapple with floods aftermath
01:06
Heavy rains and floods paralyze Nairobi, death toll rises in Kenya
02:09
Hundreds of thousands displaced by flooding in Burundi
01:00
At least 58 killed by 2 weeks of floods in Tanzania