Deaths are reported in France, Austria and Italy
Powerful storms have battered areas of central and southern Europe, killing at least 13 people including three children. The deaths, most from falling trees, were reported in Italy and Austria, and on the French island of Corsica. Heavy rain and winds wrecked campsites on the island, while in Venice, Italy, masonry was blown off the bell tower of St Mark's Basilica. The storms follow weeks of heatwave and drought across much of the continent.
In Corsica, winds gusting up to 224 km/h (140mph) uprooted trees and damaged mobile homes. Authorities there said a 13-year-old girl was killed by a falling tree on a campsite. A man died in a similar incident and an elderly woman was killed when her car was hit by the detached roof of a beach hut. Two other people, a fisherman and a female kayaker, died out at sea.
Later French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, who has arrived in Corsica to inspect storm damage, reported a sixth death. Dozens more people were injured on both land and sea. Witnesses to the storms said they had been completely unexpected and no warning was given.
"We have never seen such huge storms as this, you would think it was a tropical storm," restaurant owner Cedric Boell told Reuters news agency.
On the French mainland, some southern areas were hit by power cuts and streets were flooded in the country's second city, Marseille.
In Austria two girls were killed by a falling tree near a lake in Carinthia.
Later, three more deaths were reported by media in Lower Austria province, also as a result of a falling tree.
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Meanwhile in Italy, a man and a woman were killed by falling trees in separate incidents in the region of Tuscany.
High winds swept through Venice, blowing café umbrellas across St Mark's Square and dislodging brickwork from the cathedral belltower
Seaside resorts in Tuscany and further north in Liguria were damaged by the storms. But in southern Italy, the heatwave continued, with temperatures of up to 40C recorded in Sicily. And across the Mediterranean Sea in Algeria, at least 38 people have died in forest fires. Many parts of Europe have seen weeks of exceptionally hot and dry weather. Extreme weather events, including both heatwaves and storms, have become more intense and more frequent in recent years because of human-induced climate change.
The world has already warmed by about 1.1C since the industrial era began and temperatures will keep rising unless governments around the world make steep cuts to emissions.