Chancellor Angela Merkel toured flooded regions of southeastern Germany today, pledging at least 50 million euros (USD 65 million) in immediate federal help and holding out the possibility for more.
She told reporters in Passau, a city of 50,000 on the Austrian border, that the damage looked even worse than during the massive flooding that hit central Europe in 2002.
At least eight people have been reported dead so far and nine missing in the floods sweeping through Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the Czech Republic.
In the Czech Republic, authorities evacuated animals from the Prague zoo and closed a major bridge in the capital today.
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The rain in Prague has halted but the Vltava river that runs through the city and flows into the Elbe was still raging, with currents and water levels far exceeding the norm. The famous Charles Bridge was closed as a precaution.
This year's spike in water levels has been far less than in 2002 so far, but still forced the Prague Zoo to evacuate animals after the lower side of the park was submerged and will once again need major reconstruction.
The German city of Passau, a city built around the intersection of the Danube, the Inn and the Ilz rivers, has been one of the worst hit by the flooding in central Europe.
Peak floodwaters coursing out of the Czech Republic were expected to hit Dresden, capital of the German province of Saxony, along the Elbe in three to four days. Already, the German cities of Pirna and Meissen were reporting flooding in their historic centers.
Cities and towns in the German states of Saxony Anhalt, Thuringia and Brandenburg were also hit with flooding.