A VIOLENT storm bringing rain and hail scythed across the country’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, killing more than 100 people, rescue officials saids, as the chief minister ordered relief funds to be distributed within 24 hours.
Storms are common in the state during the hot season from March to June before monsoon rains bring respite, but Wednesday’s storm injured 59 people, damaged 87 homes and killed 114 livestock, authorities said.
At least 104 people died in about a dozen districts, the worst hit being the area around the Hindu pilgrimage city of Prayagraj, the office of the state’s relief commissioner, Hrishikesh Bhaskar Yashod, said.
“The entire area where we live turned black for around half an hour,” said Ashok Rai, who lives in the coal-rich town of Obra in the state’s Sonbhadra district.
“Strong winds lifted hoardings, signboards and thick coal dust from the ground and hurled them around.”
Television images showed uprooted trees and billboards swept onto cars in the aftermath of the storm, which also knocked down wooden furniture at roadside stalls.
Strong winds hurled into the air a man ripped from a tin structure to which he was clinging, a video clip showed on television, which said he was injured but survived his ordeal in the district of Bareilly.
Falling trees and collapsing walls also claimed some lives, a state relief official said. — Reuters
