Madrid (EFE).- This Sunday, the weather has improved, and some evacuated individuals in Andalucía are returning to their homes. New fronts are forming from the west, and intense and continuous rainfall is expected in the coming days in western Galicia, as well as in the Strait region, Jaén, and Granada. The east of Andalucía and northwest Murcia are under an orange alert due to winds. In the Almanzora valley, Los Vélez, the Campo de Tabernas (Almería), Guadix and Baza (Granada), as well as in northwest Murcia, gusts of wind of up to 90 kilometres per hour could be recorded. In Andalucía, there are over 11,000 evacuated people, with flooded banks and the risk of landslides. The number of emergencies managed in this community due to storm Marta amounts to 10,613. Most of these incidents were reported in Cádiz, followed by Sevilla, Jaén, Granada, Málaga, Córdoba, Almería, and Huelva. More than 500 members of the Military Emergency Unit continue to supervise and monitor the rivers, ready to intervene if assistance is required. In Jaén, a man suffered injuries in the municipality of Canena due to the collapse of a park wall. In Isla Cristina, Huelva, the collapse of a containment wall left 13 people trapped in caravans at a campsite, who were subsequently rescued. The overflow of a stream in Chiclana de la Frontera, Cádiz, necessitated the rescue of an 18-year-old woman. The UME used a boat to rescue one person and two dogs in Llano del Arroz, in El Palmar de Troya, Sevilla. This morning, the level of the Guadalquivir in Córdoba began to drop, reaching 4.9 metres at 1:00 PM, after being close to 6 metres at midnight. However, it remains above the red level, which is 2.5 metres. Additionally, Adif has announced that train services have been suspended between Jaén, Espeluy, Alcolea, and Lora del Río due to poor track conditions.
The weather gives a brief respite, but new fronts will arrive this very afternoon.