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At least 111 people were killed after an unseasonal violent storm hit the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh with heavy rain, hail and lightning on Wednesday, officials said.
The storm swept through five districts, uprooting trees and billboards and sending them crashing into cars. It also disrupted mobile networks in many areas, hampering rescue and relief work and making it difficult for officials to do a full assessment of the damage.
State authorities initially reported that 89 people had been “killed because of the storm, lightning and rain-related incidents” before revising the death toll to 111 and the number of injured to more than 50. An official told Reuters many of the deaths were caused by falling trees and collapsing walls of homes.
Narendra N Srivastava, a state official, said emergency teams were deployed across the affected areas and that homes, crops and power infrastructure had been widely damaged, especially in rural districts.
Russian president Vladimir Putin on Thursday expressed condolences over the deaths and damage caused by the storm in a message to Indian president Droupadi Murmu and prime minister Narendra Modi.
“Please convey my sympathy and support to the families and friends of the victims, as well as my wishes for a speedy recovery to all those affected by this natural disaster,” he said.
The UAE foreign ministry also expressed its sympathy to the families of the victims as well as to the government and people of India, wishing a speedy recovery for all the injured.
Simon Wong, the high commissioner of Singapore to India, said that he was “shocked and saddened by the news of the loss of lives” in Uttar Pradesh.
In the state’s Prayagraj district, people described panic as strong winds tore through neighbourhoods.
“The storm came suddenly and the sky turned completely dark within minutes,” Ram Kishore told The Associated Press. “Tin roofs were flying and people ran indoors. We could hear trees falling throughout the evening.”
In Bhadohi district, which was hit the hardest, at least 16 people died in separate incidents and six were injured, two of them seriously, local police said.
Savitri Devi, a resident of the village, said that her family narrowly escaped after strong winds damaged their mud house.
“We rushed outside when the walls started shaking because of the wind. Our roof collapsed moments later. We spent the night at a relative’s house,” she said.
In Fatehpur, nine people were killed and 16 injured. Additional district magistrate Avinash Tripathi said eight people, including five women, died in Khaga tehsil and the ninth victim, a woman, was killed when a house wall collapsed in Sadar tehsil.
In Budaun, five people were killed and as many injured. The dead included two young girls. Mausami, 10, and Rajni, 9, died after the mud wall of a hut they had taken shelter in collapsed. Two women who were with them in the hut were seriously injured.
File. People take shelter outside a gift shop after a hailstorm in Amritsar (AFP via Getty)
In another incident in Tark Paroli village, a woman named Laxmi, 40, died after a tree fell on a tubewell room where several people had taken shelter, bringing down the roof.
Three people were injured, including a woman whose condition was described as critical. A truck driver died after an eucalyptus tree fell on his vehicle near Bisoli and a 22-year-old died after a tree fell on him as he was on his way to deliver food to his father.
In Sonbhadra, a man died after a tree fell on him when he stopped to shelter under it. In Chandauli, two people died in separate incidents of wall collapse and a tree falling.
Chief minister Adityanath directed district officials to reach affected areas and complete relief work within 24 hours, warning that negligence would not be tolerated. He also ordered compensation for losses and directed revenue and agriculture departments, alongside insurance companies, to survey damage and report to the government.
Uttar Pradesh, which at 240 million is home to more people than Brazil, is particularly vulnerable to violent pre-monsoon storms.
However, hailstorms of this intensity are unusual in mid-May, when the state is usually in the grip of peak summer heat, with temperatures often exceeding 40C and the monsoon still weeks away.
India has been enduring an intense heatwave this summer. One day in late April, the South Asian nation accounted for all of the world’s 50 hottest cities.