Spain’s royals join memorial mass for flood victims

Spain’s royals join memorial mass for flood victims

King Felipe and Queen Letizia return to the Valencia region, where angry locals pelted them with mud over aid shortages.

Spain memorial
Spain’s King Felipe (left) and Queen Letizia attend the funeral for victims of the devastating floods that killed 230 at the Valencia cathedral. (EPA Images pic)
VALENCIA:
Spain’s King Felipe joined hundreds of mourners in a memorial mass on Monday for victims of the devastating floods that killed 230 people in the east of the country.

Felipe and his wife Queen Letizia returned to the Valencia region, where in the aftermath of the disaster they had been pelted with mud by locals angry at a lack of aid from authorities.

This time they received applause as they arrived for a mass in the cathedral in Valencia, capital city of the region worst hit by the floods on Oct 29.

Amid tight security, they joined relatives of some of those killed, national government ministers, mayors of towns that were hit, and regional president Carlos Mazon, fiercely criticised for his handling of the disaster.

In an address, Archbishop of Valencia Enrique Benavent paid tribute to voluntary workers and people who “in the most tragic moments risked their lives to save others”.

Torrential rains on Oct 29 caused flash floods that killed at least 230 people, swept away cars, and wrecked homes and businesses, mainly in the Valencia region on the Mediterranean coast. Four people are still missing.

Popular outrage over the authorities’ handling of the disaster boiled over in the ground-zero town of Paiporta on Nov 3 when survivors hurled mud at the king and queen, as well as Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

The royal couple cut short that visit but were received with applause and cheers when they returned to the region on Nov 19.

They were applauded at Monday’s mass but there were some boos and even shouts of “murderers!” in front of the cathedral as they left.

The government has scrambled to put together aid packages collectively worth €16.6 billion (US$17.5 billion) in grants and loans to help stricken citizens.

A victims’ association said in a statement that politicians should not be allowed to “launder their image” by attending Monday’s mass.

Sonia Fuster, a Valencia resident who lost her father in the floods, told AFP she left the memorial early in protest of the presence of elected officials.

“It was a funeral for the families, because in my case, for example, we weren’t able to have a proper funeral. It was a moment for us, the families”, not for those “who let us drown”, she said.

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