Seville, Spain—A violent storm system dropped unprecedented amounts of rainfall over the mountainous terrain, triggering a sudden flash flood that tore through a low-lying Andalusian village and killed two motorists. The wall of brown water and mud transformed the main provincial road into a raging river within fifteen minutes, trapping several vehicles before drivers could escape to higher ground. Rescue helicopters discovered the submerged vehicles caught against a stone bridge two kilometers downstream.
Divers from the civil guard recovered the bodies of both drivers from the interiors of their vehicles after water levels dropped slightly this morning. The victims were swept away when they attempted to cross a normalmente dry seasonal creek bed that had instantly filled with mountain runoff. Local authorities had issued a generalized weather alert, but the speed of the surge left no time for physical road closures.
The floodwaters breached the ground floors of over sixty homes in the village center, depositing layers of thick mud and debris inside living spaces. Residents used plastic buckets and brooms to clear the sludge while checking structural walls for water-induced cracking. The force of the current uprooted mature olive trees and tossed parked vehicles onto their sides against building facades.
The regional government declared a state of catastrophe for the affected agricultural zone to expedite the release of emergency reconstruction funds. The local water management infrastructure failed completely when a major upstream drainage canal became blocked by debris, redirecting the full force of the flood into residential sectors. Critics point to long-delayed dredging projects that were cut from the regional budget last winter.
Emergency crews are utilizing heavy front-end loaders to clear mud, broken asphalt, and smashed vehicles from the primary access roads into the village. Drinking water networks are offline after the main supply pipe fractured under the weight of the shifting mud outside the town perimeter. Bottled water trucks are being routed from neighboring towns to meet the immediate needs of the population.
Military emergency units arrived this afternoon to assist local personnel with structural stability assessments of the historic stone bridge. The foundation of the crossing shows deep erosion from the high-velocity debris impact during the peak of the flash flood. The main route remains closed to all heavy transport vehicles until a full engineering report is completed.
Medical teams established a field station in the village hall to treat residents for minor injuries, hypothermia, and shock. Several elderly residents had to be rescued from rooftop terraces by neighbors using ladders before official emergency services could reach the isolated town. The local school will remain closed for the week due to severe water damage in the classrooms.
Satellite weather data indicates another band of intense low-pressure storms is moving toward the southern coast, threatening to drop more water onto already saturated hillsides. Civil guard patrols are stationed at every low-lying crossing to enforce immediate mandatory turn-backs for all civilian traffic.
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