MILAN (AFP) – At least five people were found dead in Italy on Tuesday following violent storms in the north and wildfires in Sicily, which could lead the government to declare a state of emergency in the hardest-hit regions.
A 16-year-old girl on a camping trip was among two people who died in storms that hit northern Italy, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said.
The teenager was killed when a tree fell on her tent during a scout camp near Brescia, after high winds and torrential rain overnight.
On Monday, a middle-aged woman died after also being hit by a falling tree in Lissone, north of Milan.
Meloni confirmed the two “tragic” deaths due to bad weather, and offered her thoughts to their loved ones on social media.
Milan residents reported torrential rain and hail in the early hours of Tuesday morning, which flooded streets and uprooted trees, many of which fell onto parked cars.
Transport authorities reported serious damage to the city’s electricity network, while an AFP journalist said water in the historic centre was temporarily shut off.
Firefighters said the situation was “very serious”, reporting more than 200 calls for help across Milan since 4am (0200 GMT).
But even as the north was drenched, the heatwave across the south persisted, with temperatures of 47.6 degrees Celsius recorded in the eastern Sicilian city of Catania on Monday.
The bodies of two people in the 70s were found in a house destroyed by the flames while another 88-year-old woman was found near the Sicilian city of Palermo, according to media reports Tuesday evening.
Sicily’s regional president Renato Schifani said he planned to ask the government ahead of a ministers’ meeting to declare a state of emergency for the Mediterranean island.