[8] Romanian Prime Minister Emil Boc visited the area, touring Suceava and Botoșani counties, both hard-hit by flooding and still under weather advisories.
[9] According to an IGSU press release, the storms and flooding affected the counties of Alba, Arad, Bacău, Botoșani, Brașov, Cluj, Hunedoara, Iași, Mehedinți, Neamț, Olt, Prahova, Sălaj, Sibiu, Suceava, Timiș, Tulcea, Vâlcea and Vrancea.
The north-eastern town of Dorohoi witnessed 6 deaths in the night of June 28–29 as floods rose to just over 1 metre, 3,3 feet in some places.
[8] The heavy rain that had been falling for much of the past week in the Balkan country and forecasters have warned that it will continue in northeast Romania until Wednesday morning.
[8] The emergency situations spokeswoman Dorina Lupu from Botoșani County said unusually heavy rain had killed 6 people, most in the town of Dorohoi on the 29th.
If the dam breaches, the resulting flood would drown one-quarter of the city, including its shipyard, port and customs office.
Floods spawned by heavy rainfall also affected thousands of acres of pasture and farmland, roads, bridges and power lines in the rural areas in the northeastern part of the country.