German authorities urged 15,000 more people to flee their homes in a city on the swollen Elbe river Sunday as central Europe's worst floods in a decade also threatened Hungary after causing havoc in the Czech Republic and Austria.
The river Danube reached a new record high in Budapest but the Hungarian capital's mayor sought to ease concerns, saying water levels were stabilizing, although about 1,200 people were evacuated along the river.
The deluge has also sparked massive emergency responses in Austria and Slovakia.
A torrent of flood waters in Germany has turned vast areas into a brown water world, sparked a mass mobilization of emergency workers and caused billions of euros in damage in what one lawmaker termed a "national catastrophe".
Rescue helicopters criss-crossed the sky and military armored personnel carriers rumbled through the flood zone, where thousands of troops, firefighters and volunteers were frantically building up flood defenses with sandbags.
Across central Europe, the floods have killed at least 18 people, including 10 in the Czech Republic.
The German city of Magdeburg urged 15,000 residents to leave the east bank of the river Elbe, where an almost 7.5 meter peak -- up from the normal level of two meters -- was expected to strain saturated dykes for the next few days.
"We hope that the dykes will withstand the pressure over the coming days, but we can't be 100 percent sure," said fire brigade spokesman Andreas Hamann, one of 1,200 emergency staff working around the clock in the area.
The move was described as a precaution, but a city spokesman said "people really are supposed to leave" in face of the danger. In all, 23,000 people in and around the city have been told to evacuate this weekend.
"The hardest thing is not knowing what to do," Brigitte Ilsmann, 88, said as she sat with a group of elderly Germans in a Magdeburg school sports hall turned disaster evacuation centre.
Evacuated from her care home, the old lady who moves with a walker took refuge in the facility where the Red Cross has set up cots with grey blankets and offers thermoses of coffee, baskets full of apples and biscuits.
Soldiers in Magdeburg were also struggling to save a power installation in the harbor area, as water damage would not only knock out electricity to tens of thousands of homes but also to water pumps running at full tilt.
Tensions eased in cities upriver along the Elbe and its tributaries, including Dresden, Halle and Bitterfeld, where many evacuation orders were lifted and people returned to start clearing out their mud-caked homes.
The water level in Magdeburg was higher than during "once-a-century" floods of 2002, local authorities said. Magdeburg lies downriver from where the Saale river spills into the Elbe, creating a water surge a record 40 kilometers long.
Further downstream, towns including Lauenburg and the village of Hitzacker in Lower Saxony were preparing for the peak to hit in coming days.
The rains severely swelled the Danube, hitting southern Germany, especially the city of Passau, which has moved from alert to clean-up mode.
Further east along the Danube, authorities said Budapest flood barriers were high enough to protect the capital, where the river was forecast to peak at 8.95 meters on Sunday.
"Budapest is not at risk of a catastrophe, the level is not expected to rise significantly," Mayor Istvan Tarlos said, adding that leaking dykes had been fixed.
Switzerland had so far been largely spared the havoc wreaked by the floods but at around 6:00 pm (1600 GMT) Sunday, violent rain and hail storms hit the western cantons of Vaud and Fribourg.
The downpour caused mudslides and floods that blocked roads and a railway and forced more than a dozen people to evacuate, police said. No one was injured.
In Germany, President Joachim Gauck visited flood-hit regions, where in vast areas only roofs and tree tops stick out of the water and the only access was by boat or helicopter.
"One cannot imagine how much remains to be dealt with," he said.
Adding to tensions was a threat to attack dykes from a group calling itself the "Germanophobic Flood Brigade". Aerial and ground surveillance had been stepped up, said Saxony-Anhalt state interior minister Holger Stahlknecht.
Ironically, the sun shone Sunday above most of Germany's flood zone, forcing the thousands packing sandbags to seek supplies of sun block and insect repellent.
But more rains were expected by Monday in Thuringia, Saxony and Bavaria, with as much as 50 liters per square meter expected within a few hours.
Chancellor Angela Merkel was planning a crisis meeting with state premiers on how to share the bill for the disaster -- estimated to hit tens of billions of euros -- the Leipziger Volkszeitung newspaper reported.
"We're dealing with a national catastrophe," Gerda Hasselfeldt, lawmaker for the conservative Christian Social Union, was quoted saying.
Despite the widespread damage, growth in Europe's biggest economy was unlikely to suffer much as a result, said a survey of leading economists by Die Welt daily.
"Absurdly, economies actually pick up after natural disasters because the property damage needs to be repaired," Deutsche Bank chief strategist Thomas Mayer said. (AFP)