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Travellers stranded after floods Travellers stranded after floods
(about 2 hours later)
Hundreds of travellers were stranded overnight after Friday's heavy rain and flash floods lashed England and Wales.Hundreds of travellers were stranded overnight after Friday's heavy rain and flash floods lashed England and Wales.
E-mails to the BBC News website told of families forced to spend the night on the M5 and roads in the Worcester area. Families were forced to spend the night on the M5 and roads in the Worcester area, while in Oxford rail passengers were forced to stay in a school.
In Oxford, 150 sleeping bags were ordered as rail passengers were put up in a school. RAF helicopters rescued 60 people in Sedgeberrow, Worcestershire.
Thousands of people with flooded homes spent the night in emergency centres. More rain is expected for Wales, central and northern England.Thousands of people with flooded homes spent the night in emergency centres. More rain is expected for Wales, central and northern England.
Many rail services have been cancelled, with no replacement bus service because roads have been closed. Police in the West Midlands advised people not to travel unless their journey was necessary. Ambulance stranded
In spite of the problems, Graham Bowskill of the Highways Agency rejected the notion that the agency had failed to prepare for the forecast weather. The travel situation is getting back to normal after Friday's chaos but this is one of the busiest weekends of the year and congestion is reported at some of the UK airports.
"We can't prevent extreme weather conditions. What we can do is work tirelessly to try and put the road back in order and get the traffic moving again and that has been our priority over the night," said Mr Bowskill. Many rail services have been cancelled, with no replacement bus service because roads have been closed.
Sleeping bags
The Environment Agency has issued 16 severe flood warnings, for the Anglia and Midlands areas. Parts of the Rivers Severn, Avon, Arrow, Dene, Tame, Great Ouse and Teme are affected.The Environment Agency has issued 16 severe flood warnings, for the Anglia and Midlands areas. Parts of the Rivers Severn, Avon, Arrow, Dene, Tame, Great Ouse and Teme are affected.
There are currently around 2,000 people at emergency centres in Tewkesbury, Gloucester, Cheltenham, Chipping Campden and Moreton in Marsh, police said.
And in Birmingham 200 people were evacuated from Witton and Tame Roads in the Aston district when the River Tame overflowed at about midnight.
The River Cole had flooded earlier in the Sparkhill area, forcing about 60 people to leave their homes.
John Kelly, Oxfordshire's county emergency planner, said passengers had been taken off trains in Oxford and Banbury and brought to Cherwell School in north Oxford, which had been turned into a rest centre.
YOUR PICTURES Your images of flooding from around the countryYOUR PICTURES Your images of flooding from around the country
The main developments include:
  • Thousands of motorists were stranded overnight on the M5. A pregnant woman was rescued after the ambulance she was travelling in became stranded in the floodwater
  • RAF helicopters airlifted to safety around 60 residents in Sedgeberrow, Worcs, who were stranded when the River Isbourne burst its banks
  • Around 2,000 people have been taken to emergency centres in Tewkesbury, Gloucester, Cheltenham, Chipping Campden and Moreton in Marsh
  • At Heathrow 141 flights were cancelled on Friday. On Saturday the airport was struggling to deal with the backlog
  • A person is reported missing in a river in Evesham, which emergency services described as "an island"
  • HAVE YOUR SAY No wonder there's so much flooding. The roadside drains are simply not cleaned out until people actually complain to their councils. Craig, Bradford Send us your experiences
  • In Oxfordshire, passengers were taken off trains in Oxford and Banbury and taken to a school which was turned into a rest centre
  • The Wakestock Music Festival in north Wales has been cancelled because of safety concerns
  • In Birmingham 200 people were evacuated from Witton and Tame Roads in the Aston district when the River Tame overflowed at about midnight
  • The West Midlands Ambulance Service has asked people only to contact it if in an emergency
  • Graham Bowskill of the Highways Agency rejected the notion that the agency had failed to prepare for the forecast weather
  • Police in the West Midlands, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire and Herefordshire advised people not to travel unless their journey was necessary
  • Sleeping bags
    John Kelly, Oxfordshire's county emergency planner, said passengers had been taken off trains in Oxford and Banbury and brought to Cherwell School in north Oxford, which had been turned into a rest centre.
    "We've ordered 150 sleeping bags from the Army... and some of my staff have gone down to the local Tesco to get things like towels, toothpaste and soap."We've ordered 150 sleeping bags from the Army... and some of my staff have gone down to the local Tesco to get things like towels, toothpaste and soap.
    "This is part of our plan, this is a thing we plan for, and we make arrangements for, but things always go wrong."This is part of our plan, this is a thing we plan for, and we make arrangements for, but things always go wrong.
    "This is not the first choice of school, because the one we were going to had actually been flooded itself.""This is not the first choice of school, because the one we were going to had actually been flooded itself."
    'Island town''Island town'
    One woman contacted the BBC to express her concerns over her family, who she said had been trapped on the M5 for several hours.One woman contacted the BBC to express her concerns over her family, who she said had been trapped on the M5 for several hours.
    "My family including my elderly grandparents who are diabetic and my mother who also suffers from the condition have been stranded on the M5 for nine hours now with hardly any food or water," she said on Friday evening.
    "I am really fearing for their health but there seems to be nothing anyone can do. There doesn't seem to be anyone helping them or giving advice on the motorway."
    HAVE YOUR SAY No wonder there's so much flooding. The roadside drains are simply not cleaned out until people actually complain to their councils. Craig, Bradford Send us your experiences
    There are also reports that there is a person missing in a river in Evesham.
    Alex Mackie from the Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue Service told the BBC that the town had been turned into "an island".
    He said: "Our reports are that there are quite a lot of people trapped in houses, let alone motor cars in that area.
    "The River Avon itself has burst its banks and its tributary rivers in the Vale of Evesham are all flooded as well."
    In the village of Sedgeberrow in Worcestershire, 62 people had to be rescued from their homes after the River Isbourne burst its banks - some of them were plucked from their homes by RAF helicopter.
    The sudden downpour caught many people outThe sudden downpour caught many people out
    BBC broadcast meteorologist Daniel Corbett said: "The weather across the UK has been far from typical this summer." "My family including my elderly grandparents who are diabetic and my mother who also suffers from the condition have been stranded on the M5 for nine hours now with hardly any food or water," she said on Friday evening.
    He said a broad band of low pressure had been sitting across the UK, pushing the jet stream - a ribbon of fast moving air in the upper atmosphere - further south than usual, keeping high pressure and settled weather away from the UK. A bus with 30 holidaymakers aged between 65 and 88 spent the night on the M5, after leaving Scarborough for South Wales at 0930 BST on Friday.
    "In a normal summer the jet stream is to the north of the UK. This allows the Azores high to build across the UK and bring settled and more typical summer weather for the UK," said Mr Corbett. After spending the night in his car on the M5, Simon Clarke said there was no anger among motorists but it was "not nice" because there were no facilities.
    BBC broadcast meteorologist Matt Taylor said there was a slim risk of torrential rain in the south and south east of England and that overall rain would remain heavy in the Midlands and north of England.
    He also warned that further flooding could occur as Friday's heavy rain continued to filter through the river system.