
The rising level of the Cauca river, in the north-eastern province of Antoquia, has forced at least 600 people to leave their homes on Sunday, as the hydroelectric plant Ituango created a situation of emergency, reported Medellin's Public Companies or EPM.
According to the latest reports, coming from the Unified Command Post in Hidroituango, 19 houses, 2 educational rooms and a health center have been totally destroyed and pedestrian bridges such as those in Puerto Valdivia were also destroyed by the current.
More health centers and several other bridges were also affected, while people living in Puerto Valdivia, Tarazá, Cáceres and Caucasia were preemptively evacuated on Saturday night, stated the government of Antoquia.
More than a thousand people would have been evacuated according to the non-profit organization Rios Vivos.



Comment: The intensity and frequency of floods around the world are increasing, and are a sure sign of shifts occurring on our planet:
- Dozens killed after dam break in Kenya, where record flooding continues
- Flood warning issued for inland Northwest US lakes and rivers due to excessive snow melt
- Heavy rainfall floods parts of Andalusia, Spain
- Record-cold wave recedes, but now ice jams are causing flooding in US northeast
- Flood alerts in 30 departments of France as rivers burst banks
- Washington's Skagit River causes major flooding from highest flow in 11 years
Also check out SOTTs monthly documentary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - April 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs