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WEATHER

One dead and two injured in northern Italy storms

A 57-year-old woman died after being crushed by a tree in the northern city of Mantua as violent storms swept through Lombardy on Wednesday night.

One dead and two injured in northern Italy storms
Violent storms swept through Lombardy on Wednesday, killing one and injuring two. Photo: Jody Sticca/Flickr

The woman had parked her car on a road beside a public garden, and was walking towards the other side of the street when a huge poplar tree tumbled, killing her instantly, La Repubblica reported.

The mayor of Mantua, Mattia Palazzi, who immediately went to the site of the accident, insisted the tree was “healthy” but said “the mix of wind and water in the violent storm soaked the earth, causing this terrible tragedy.”

“The trees in the garden had been recently pruned, but now we will reduce the height of all of them,” he added.

In Brianza, a 47-year-old had to be airlifted to Milan’s Niguarda hospital after a tree fell on his car, trapping him inside. A 34-year-old fellow passenger, who was found by rescuers outside the car, was also taken to hospital in Lecco with injuries.

In late May, flash floods wreaked havoc in Milan after a violent storm caused 90 litres of water to fall per each square metre of ground within just three hours. No casualties were reported.

In February, five people were killed when storms battered most of the country.

The weather is forecast to be calmer from Thursday, with temperatures creeping up across the peninsula over the next few days. 

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STORMS

UPDATE: Death toll from storms in Switzerland rises to six

The death toll from flash floods that hit Switzerland after storms at the weekend rose to six Wednesday after a body was discovered in the southeastern canton of Ticino, police said.

UPDATE: Death toll from storms in Switzerland rises to six

The alpine region is experiencing its worst flooding since 2000 when 13 people were killed in a mudslide which destroyed the village of Gondo.

Police said the body was found in the Maggia river — the same area where another victim was discovered on Tuesday.

Emergency services had to use a helicopter to recover the remains.

The latest death brings the toll in the Ticino canton to five, making it the region hardest hit by the storms.

On Sunday, three German women in their 70s died after a torrential downpour triggered a landslide in the Italian-speaking canton.

In the neighbouring canton of Valais, where hundreds of people were evacuated as a result of overflowing rivers, a German man was found dead in a hotel basement in Saas-Grund.

Police said that he was probably taken by surprise by the rapid rise of the floodwater.

Scientists say climate change driven by human activity is increasing the severity, frequency and length of extreme weather events such as floods and storms.

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