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Fırat Taşkını Deyrizor'da Binlerce Kişiyi Yerinden Etti

Summary · AI generated

Doğu Suriye'nin Deyrizor ilinde Fırat Nehri'nin aniden yükselmesi sonucu şiddetli sel meydana geldi. Suriyeli yetkililer, son otuz yıldır ilk kez baraj kapaklarını açmak zorunda kaldı ve bu durum nehir boyunca geniş çaplı taşkınlara yol açtı. Taşkın suları çok sayıda köyü ve tarım arazisini tamamen sular altında bırakırken, binlerce bölge sakini evlerini terk etmek zorunda kaldı. Etkilenen nüfusa ilişkin net bir sayı verilmezken, altyapı ve geçim kaynaklarının ağır hasar gördüğü bildiriliyor. Fırat'ın Türkiye'den doğması nedeniyle su yönetimi hassas bir konu olsa da, taşkının doğrudan bir nedene bağlandığına dair resmî bir açıklama yapılmadı. Bu felaket, zaten kırılgan durumdaki Suriye'de yerinden edilme krizini derinleştirirken acil insani yardım ihtiyacını da artırdı.

This summary is currently in Turkish; automated English translation is coming soon.

Started 30 May, 19:43 2 events Updated 01 Jun
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latest: 01 Jun
  1. Political30 May, 19:43

    Euphrates flooding displaces thousands in Syria's Deir Ezzor

    Euphrates flooding displaces thousands in Syria's Deir Ezzor Reem Aouir on Sat, 05/30/2026 - 19:27 Syrian authorities opened dam spillways for the first time in three decades as rising Euphrates waters displaced thousands across eastern Syria. The picture shows a flooded area in Syria's Deir Ezzor province after rising water levels in the Euphrates River caused widespread inundation on May 28, 2026. (SANA/AFP) Off More than 2,400 families in eastern Syria's Deir Ezzor province have been affected by severe flooding after water levels in the Euphrates River rose sharply, inundating villages, damaging farmland and disrupting access to essential services across the region. The flooding, which Syria's Ministry of Energy said was caused by “the abundance of the current rainy season and the opening of floodgates at dams located along the river in Turkish territory”, has hit Deir Ezzor and neighbouring Raqqa hardest since the surge began on 26 May. Describing the rise in flows from across the border as “unprecedented,” the ministry confirmed it had opened three spillway gates at Syria’s Euphrates Dam for the first time in more than 30 years to relieve pressure on the structure. By Friday, the ministry announced that efforts by the Syrian leadership with its Turkish side had “resulted in the start of reducing the quantities of water coming into Syrian territory via the Euphrates river.” In a video posted on X, Mohammad al-Bashir, the Minister of Energy, said that “water levels along the Euphrates River are gradually improving following technical measures taken at the dam”, adding that authorities will continue monitoring conditions until levels return to normal. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); In the early hours of the flooding, three children died after swimming in the Euphrates despite repeated warnings by Syria’s Emergency and Disaster Management Minister Raed al-Saleh. The rising waters also forced dozens of families from their homes and left several villages partially isolated after roads and river crossings were damaged. Emergency teams have been deployed to reinforce riverbanks, evacuate residents from vulnerable locations and assess damage to public infrastructure. Al-Saleh also announced on Friday that water levels have returned to normal and no new flooding has been reported. On Friday, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa visited the province of Deir Ezzor, accompanied by a ministerial delegation, to assess the situation and humanitarian conditions of those affected communities. Syria after Assad News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

  2. Humanitarian01 Jun, 11:24

    Floodwaters devastate eastern Syria as Euphrates river rises

    For several days, the province of Deir Ezzor has been severely hit by flooding. Entire villages and farmland have been completely submerged and thousands of residents have been forced to leave. The cause is the sudden rise in the level of the Euphrates, the river that originates in Turkey.

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