Tens of thousands of people on Saturday protested in the eastern Spanish city of Valencia, one year after the floods that killed 229 people.
Demonstrators were demanding the resignation of regional leader Carlos Mazon over his handling of the disaster.
They displayed banners with messages such as “Mazon to prison” and chanted, “They didn’t die, they were murdered.”
With a total of 229 deaths, it was Europe’s worst flood-related disaster since 1967.
Regional leader Carlos Mazon has been under immense pressure, with regular protests against him on or near the monthly anniversaries of the disasterImage: Jorge Gil/Europa Press/dpa/picture alliance
Spain’s deadliest floods in modern history
Mazon’s administration has been heavily criticized for issuing an alert too late.
The warning arrived more than 12 hours after the national weather agency had issued its highest alert level for torrential rains.
Residents told Spanish media that muddy water was already surrounding their cars, flooding streets and pouring into their homes by the time they received the messages.
Under Spain’s decentralized system, managing disasters falls under the authority of regional governments.
However, Mazon claimed that his administration lacked the necessary information to issue a warning sooner and said that the magnitude was unforeseeable.
Over 50,000 people took part in the protest, according to the central government’s office in ValenciaImage: Alex Juarez/Anadolu/picture alliance
A judicial investigation into the emergency response is underway.
On the day of the floods, Mazon had an hour-long lunch with a local journalist who had been summoned by the court on Thursday.
Spain’s Valencia region mulls future flood defenses
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Edited by: Wesley Dockery