1967 Portugal floods

The 1967 Portugal floods (the "big floods") were flash floods that took place in 25 and 26 November 1967, Portugal, in the Lisbon metropolitan area, affecting a total of 14 municipalities.[1][2] It was the most deadly flood registered in Portugal, accounting for more than half of all registered deaths by floods since 1865.[2] It was also the deadliest natural hazard in Portugal since the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.[2]

1967 Portugal floods
Newspaper "O Século Ilustrado" cover in 2 December 1967. The title reads: "The night in which rain killed."
Date25 and 26 November 1967
LocationLisbon Metropolitan Area
Deaths500-700+

Background

The network of river basins affected by the flood were small (17 with basin areas smaller than 40km²) or medium-sized (Trancão River, Alenquer River, and Grande da Pipa River, all with basin areas ranging from 100 to 300km²).[2] Yet, their natural characteristics (slope, low permeable formations, etc.) enable them to generate flash floods,[2] a risk that some of the affected areas still had in 2005.[3]

Extreme poverty and high birth rates had led to a rural flight towards the main cities of Portugal, namely the Lisbon metropolitan area.[2] Some of these newcomers, lacking money, would build their houses illegally, occupying plains prone to flooding and river banks.[2]

Flood details

Mouth of the Trancão River, one of the three largest rivers involved in the flood.

During the night of 25 November 1967, heavy rain poured down.[1] The rain was most intense (>120 mm) in the metropolitan area of Lisbon, particularly in a 60km line between Estoril and Alenquer, but intense rain (>75mm) affected a large area in an axis of South West to North East orientation from Lisbon to the border with Spain.[2] Most of the rain poured in a five-hour interval, between 7 p.m. and midnight.[2] Another factor that increased the impact of the flood that followed was the high tide, which was highest between 6 p.m. and 1 am.[2]

The rain led the water levels of the Tagus river near Lisbon and its tributaries to rise 3 to 4 meters, flooding many houses up to level of their first floor.[4] The flood dragged a lot of debris, namely stones and mud, but also wood, tiles and metal from houses and people's belongings.[2]

The flood took most people by surprise as they were home or already sleeping and no flood alert system existed at the time.[2] Its negative effects were worse in Odivelas riverside and in the Trancão River margins.[1] The mud dragged away many bodies, so it was difficult to estimate casualties.[1] The official death toll was 495 deaths, unofficial estimates are of at least 700 deaths.[2] Based on available sources (such as newspapers), there were 2045 people registered as being directly affected by the flood: 522 dead, 330 injured, 885 who lost their home, 307 who were evacuated and one missing person.[2] Most of the dead were originally from rural areas, namely North and Alentejo and almost one fifth of the registered dead lived in a small village called "Aldeia de Quintas" (100 dead).[2] Furthermore, the river destroyed two bridges, one in Odivelas, the other in Trancão.[2]

A leptospirosis outbreak potentially followed the flood, but the number of infected people is not known.[4]

Aftermath

Firefighters, soldiers, student associations and the Red Cross, among others, would offer relief to the victims by providing shelter, medicine, food, etc.[1][5][6] A firefighter of Odivelas reports that some people were sheltered in the local fire department for more than a month.[5] Almost 6.000 students were involved in disaster relief.[6] The students created a Central Coordinating Commission in Instituto Superior Técnico's student association that was in charge of coordinating the students' relief efforts.[6] The students would write their experiences and reflections through some outlets that were already established, such as the Comércio do Funchal, and some new, such as the Solidariedade Estudantil.[6] Students of the University of Porto (with fundraising) and University of Coimbra (with medical support) also helped.[6] These floods are considered by some as a pivotal moment that would lead to the Academic Crisis of 1969 and the Carnation Revolution.[1][7][8] Despite this, the event is not frequently evoked and the academic literature focuses mostly on the meteorological aspects of the event.[4][6]

The government attempted to censor the extent of the tragedy by not allowing television to display images of the dead and downplaying the causality numbers newspaper reported.[1] In 26 November 1967, Diário de Lisboa's front page reported more than 200 dead, while Diário de Notícias in 29 November reported 427 dead before the censorship did not allow further public tallies.[6] Some journal editors would also self-censor information they thought could led the whole text to be rejected.[9] In 29 November, the local censorship delegations received instructions to remove all references to the students' relief efforts.[6] PIDE would interrogate the United Press International correspondent Edouard Khavessian about a newspiece regarding student protests against the way the government dealt with the tragedy.[6]

"[...] only the violence of the phenomenon of exceptional character, registered in the dramatic hours of the night of 25 to 26 of November, can fully explain the greatness of the damages caused." – Ministry of the Interior's note on Diário de Lisboa, 1967.[6]

"[...] we wouldn't say: it was the floods, it was the rain. Perhaps it is fairer to say: it was misery, misery that our society did not neutralize, that caused the majority of deaths. Even in death it is sad to be miserable. Especially when you die for being miserable." – Comércio do Funchal, nº 1963, 1967.[6]

Newspapers closer to the regime would frame the catastrophe as unpredictable and would focus on the wave of grief and solidarity that followed.[6] Others, namely the Portuguese Communist Party (then an illegal party) and student publications, would focus on social factors as the main cause.[6] For example, the Solidariedade Estudantil bulletin would point out that the peak of the rain had occurred in Estoril, while most deaths would occur in the Lisbon slums.[6] Gonçalo Ribeiro Telles, soon after the floods, appeared on national TV (RTP) establishing a direct link between the lack of spatial planning and the dimension of the tragedy.[10]

Since 1967, there were only two other years with comparable events of intense precipitation: 1983 and 2008, but none led to as many deaths or evacuated people as the 1967 floods.[2] While some of the most affected areas were not repopulated after 1969, such as the Santa Cruz da Urmeira neighborhood in Odivelas (20 killed, 30 injured, 100 homeless), other areas were repopulated and have since expanded closer to the river banks.[3] New neighborhoods, such as the Bairro do Vale do Forno, have since been constructed near the river banks.[3] In effect, many areas, at least in the Odivelas area, still had high risk for flash floods as of 2005, but the local population does not consider their personal risk to be high (58%) and do not have insurance that would protect them in case of a flood (82%).[3]

See also

References

  1. "Cheias de 67 foram rastilho para revolução de 74". Cheias de 67 foram rastilho para revolução de 74. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  2. Trigo, Ricardo M.; Ramos, Catarina; Pereira, Susana S.; Ramos, Alexandre M.; Zêzere, José L.; Liberato, Margarida L. R. (1 October 2016). "The deadliest storm of the 20th century striking Portugal: Flood impacts and atmospheric circulation". Journal of Hydrology. Flash floods, hydro-geomorphic response and risk management. 541: 597–610. Bibcode:2016JHyd..541..597T. doi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.10.036. ISSN 0022-1694.
  3. Duarte, Andreia; Borges, Bruno; Ramos, Catarina; Pedro, Pedro; Pancada, Raquel (2005). "Cheias rápidas em áreas urbanas e sua percepção: O caso da bacia da ribeira de Odivelas" (PDF).
  4. Costa, Francisco da Silva; Cardina, Miguel; Vieira, António Avelino Batista (2016). "As inundações de 1967 na região de Lisboa. Uma catástrofe com diferentes leituras". Investigaciones Geográficas (51): 103–114. doi:10.5354/0719-5370.2016.41749. ISSN 0719-5370.
  5. "Bombeiros recordam as cheias de 1967". Bombeiros recordam as cheias de 1967. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  6. Costa, Francisco; Cardina, Miguel; Vieira, António (2014). "Inundações na região de Lisboa (1967): Um olhar sobre o impacto político e social" (PDF).
  7. Oliveira, Luísa (1 October 2010). "Cardina, Miguel, A tradição da contestação. Resistência estudantil em Coimbra no marcelismo. Coimbra, Angelus Novus, 2008". Ler História (in Portuguese) (59). ISSN 0870-6182.
  8. Sebastião, Sofia Pimentel (1 November 2017). Processos participativos BIP/ZIP: estratégia ou modelo de desenvolvimento local? (Thesis).
  9. Andringa, Diana (2008). "Jornalismo: uma profissão em mudança". Mundos sociais: Saberes e prácticas: 299. ISBN 978-972-95945-4-0.
  10. Schmidt, Luísa. "Ambiente e políticas ambientais:escalas e desajustes".
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