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Ten killed as violent storms slam Central Europe

A tree, broken down on the roof of a church by strong winds, is pictured on July 24, 2009, in Lutogniew near Krotoszyn. At least seven people have died in Poland and the Czech Republic and dozens were injured after heavy storms and torrential rain felled trees, electricity poles and ripped off roofs. Photo courtesy AFP

China landslide leaves 10 dead: state media
At least 10 people died after torrential rain set off a landslide in central China, state media reported Sunday, describing the downpour as the heaviest to hit the area in more than 60 years. The storm hit Huaihua city in Hunan province on Thursday and continued until Sunday morning, the official Xinhua agency reported. The landslide in the city's Hongjiang district killed at least 10 people, injured 30 and one person was missing, the agency said, adding that more than 5,000 residents were evacuated from the area. The district was hit by blackouts Sunday and telephone services were also not working, the report said. Meteorologists forecast heavy rain would hit the city again in the next two to three days, the report said. Meanwhile, at least six people were killed and 12 injured Saturday when heavy rains triggered a rockslide that hit a bridge in Wenchuan, the epicentre of the quake which devastated southwest China last year, state media reported. Authorities had warned of thunderstorms over the weekend across southwest and central China and were preparing for emergencies such as flooding and landslides, Xinhua said.
by Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) July 24, 2009
Ten people were killed and dozens injured as violent storms slammed Central Europe overnight to Friday, felling trees and electricity poles, ripping off roofs and causing local flooding.

Western and south-western Poland were hardest hit, with hurricane-force winds reaching 130-kilometres-per-hour (80 miles-per-hour) in some areas.

"Eight people died in all," Poland's national fire brigade spokesman Pawel Fratczak told AFP.

He said 82 people were seriously injured and required medical attention and that most deaths were caused by falling trees.

Those killed included a 24-year-old pregnant woman in Chojne near Sieradz, central Poland, who died when a tree branch crashed onto her car. Two children, aged 8 and 13, who were also in the car survived unscathed.

The most recent death was reported after the body of a 67-year-old man who disappeared Thursday evening was found Friday, crushed beneath a tree in a park in Legnica, south-west Poland, local police said.

In Krotoszyn, western Poland, seventeen people were injured when a broken high voltage power line fell on them, Fratczak said. Six suffered serious burns.

High winds also claimed two lives and injured dozens in the neighbouring Czech Republic.

A 75-year-old woman was killed in the northern town of Hradek nad Nisou by falling tree branches, while the body of a man presumed drowned was found after a boat capsized on a river south of the Czech capital Prague.

According to Poland's IMiGW state weather service, the unusually violent storms were caused when hot air masses from north Africa clashed with cooler air systems moving in from western Europe.

"That's what unleashed this enormous destructive force," IMiGW press officer Maria Waliniowska said.

Temperatures rose to 34 degrees Celsius (93.2 degrees Fahrenheit) in Prague and 36.8 degrees Celsius (98.2 degrees Fahrenheit) in Ceske Budejovice, in the southern Czech Republic, on Thursday afternoon hours before the storms.

The torrential rain and strong winds left a trail of destruction in countries across the region.

In Poland dozens of roofs were ripped off houses, basements and roads were flooded and numerous cars were damaged by falling trees and branches throughout the country, including the south-western city of Wroclaw, Poznan in the west and Lodz in central Poland.

High voltage power lines were downed and rail traffic was disrupted in Poland and neighbouring Slovakia.

In Austria, hail pounded 60,000 hectares (148,000 acres) of crops Thursday, causing estimated damage of 20 million euros (28.4 million dollars), according to the Osterreichische Hagelversicherung insurance company.

Storms were still battering parts of Poland Friday, but forecasts suggested they would not be as violent as those of the previous night.

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Seven killed as storms hit Poland, Czech Republic
Warsaw (AFP) July 24, 2009
At least seven people have died in Poland and the Czech Republic and dozens were injured after heavy storms and torrential rain felled trees, electricity poles and ripped off roofs. Six people died across Poland Thursday - three in Lower Silesia in the southwest, one in the western region of Poznan and two in central Lodz, Pawel Fratczak, a spokesman for the fire service told AFP. ... read more







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