German town hit by tornado

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Over 30 homes were damaged and five people injured when a strong wind funnel ripped through the town of Roetgen in western Germany.

“It blew through, short but fierce,” the local firefighters’ spokesman said on Wednesday.

Eyewitness reports and videos from the scene showed a funnel cloud that German weather experts later confirmed was a tornado. Firefighters said the storm carved “a path of destruction” through the town, according to the public broadcaster WDR.

The wind blew the top floors from two of the houses in the town of 8,600 people near the Belgian border. Window panes were broken on many buildings and about 10 houses had to be evacuated, said Roetgen Mayor Jorma Klauss.

“But we are calm and collected, there was no panic,” Klauss told the DPA news agency.

Klauss also praised the solidarity of the small town’s residents, saying that local hotel owner offered free accommodation to those affected. Authorities also set up temporary accommodation in the local school.

Large-scale destructive tornadoes are relatively rare in Germany. Even so, German meteorologists noted 17 tornadoes in Germany last year.

Several storms have pounded north and northwest Germany since the beginning of the month, including Eberhard and Franz earlier this week. Another storm, Gebhard, is set to hit on Thursday.

by Darko Janjevic (2019, Mar 14) DW

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Kyrie Wagner