In the Polish town of Zagan, there’s no time to lose.
Leaks have appeared in one of the flood walls so now the army is rushing to plug them.
A line of soldiers passes sandbags to each other until they reach the damaged area and are thrown into the water below.
If they don’t manage to slow the flow of the water, the raging river on the other side of the wall could break through and inundate the streets behind.
“For this town, the next 24 hours will be critical. If the water in the next 24 hours gets lower then everything will be correct,” explains General Piotr Fajkowski, commander of the 11th armoured cavalry division.
For some homes, the help has already come too late.
Flood waters arrived overnight, filling cellars, rising around the town’s powerplant, and submerging the local park.
More on Poland
Related Topics:
Danuta’s family has been told to evacuate the house.
Her children have been taken to safety, but she is staying put for now.
Advertisement
“I have never experienced anything like it so I’m shocked, but I hope it will be okay,” she says as she stacks sandbags in front of her door.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
2:06
Poland hit with extensive flooding
The flooding in Poland has been classified as a disaster.
Whole communities have been left underwater.
The southern city of Wroclaw is now on high alert.
A wave is predicted to hit in the next 24 hours, so the race is on to bolster defences.
Residents rapidly fill sandbags and pile them along at-risk roads.
Image: Soldiers have been deploying sandbags to protect buildings ahead of predicted flooding in Wroclaw. Pic: Reuters
Image: Residents are preparing sandbags to protect their homes. Pic: Agencja Wyborcza.pl/Reuters
Read more from Sky News:Lebanon rocked by wave of hand-held radio blastsBumper US interest rate cut aims to boost economyPortugal battling more than 100 wildfires
Jakub watches nervously as the flood creeps closer to his flat.
“Do you think this sandbag wall will hold?” I ask.
“I don’t know, I don’t know. It’s quite scary,” he replies.
In the flooded gardens, Michal is looking for stranded pets.
Image: Floodwaters have swept through Glucholazy, southwestern Poland. Pic: State fire service/AP
From the waist-high water, he shouts that he’s rescued two cats already.
Everyone is doing what they can to defend their city.
The coming hours will prove if it’s enough.
Source : Sky News