- Dramatic photos show muddy waters pounding the driver and her car
- Two men were able to climb onto the roof of the car and pull her to safety
- Another trapped driver has died of a probable heart attack, police said
- Rescuers received at least 900 calls from residents whose homes flooded
- Worker left dangling through a glass ceiling in the parliament building
The dramatic scenes unfolded as torrential rain led to flash flooding in the Greek capital, where one woman has died and thousands more people left stranded.
Two men climbed onto the roof of the silver 4x4 and pulled the driver to safety in northern suburb of Chalandri.
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Terrified: A motorist struggles to cling onto her vehicle as it was pounded by flood water in Chalandri today
Downpour: The heavy rain is the worst seen in the recession-hit country for 50 years
Carnage: At least five other cars in the same block were overturned and three were piled on top of each other
Rescue: Two men came to the aid of the trapped driver as surging, muddy water swept cars away
Surge: Torrential rain caused a river to burst its banks, bringing chaos to the morning rush hour
At least five other cars in the same block were overturned and three were piled on top of each other.
Police said a 27-year-old woman died of a probable heart attack after being trapped in her car in Halandri, another suburb north of the capital.
Flash floods: More than a metre of water gushed along the road in the city's northern suburb
'We're talking about 52 years without ever having seen such a heavy downpour in this area'
Chaos: By mid-morning, rescue teams received at more than 90 calls from commuters marooned in their cars
Freak storm: There have been power cuts across the city and public transport has been bad affected
The heavy rain is the worst seen in the recession-hit country for 50 years. It caused a river to burst its banks, bringing chaos to much of Athens during the morning rush hour.
There have also been power cuts across the city and public transport has been severely disrupted, with at least two subway stops being closed.
Meteorologist Yannis Kallianos told state television: 'This is the worst storm since 1961. We're talking about 52 years without ever having seen such a heavy downpour in this area,'
VIDEO: People trapped in cars as heavy floods wreak havoc on Athens
Hanging on: A worker fell through the glass roof of the parliament when trying to block a leak
Extreme weather: A flash of lighting rips through the sky over the Piraeus, as a storm descends on the capital
Severe disruption: Rush hour traffic came to a standstill today and public transport also suffered
Ruined: A young boy stands in front of a two-storey building that collapsed in the Aghios Panteleimonas area
Clean-up: A firefighter uses a pump to remove water from a flooded basement at Faliro, near Athens
By mid-morning, rescue teams received at least 900 calls from residents whose houses were flooded and more than 90 calls from commuters marooned in their cars.
In parliament, a worker was left dangling through the glass ceiling over the assembly as she tried to contain water dripping into the room below where lawmakers were about to start debate.
Impassable: A municipality employee works at a flooded road in central Athens following the downpour
Counting the cost: The cost of the damage is an expense that many struggling Greeks cannot afford
Resolve: People continue to wait for a bus and motorists drive on regardless of the floods
Stranded: Rubbish bins are washed away as water covers a road in the Greek capital
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