Lightning strikes kill 14 as Bangladesh lashed by seasonal storms


DHAKA, April 27 (Reuters) - ⁠At least 14 people were killed ⁠after lightning strikes hit several parts of ‌Bangladesh, officials said on Monday, as seasonal thunderstorms swept across the country.

The deaths were reported from several ​districts after sudden storms brought ⁠heavy rain and ⁠intense lightning.

Most of the victims were farmers working ⁠in ‌open fields and labourers caught in exposed areas, local authorities said. ⁠Several other people were injured and taken ​to nearby ‌hospitals, with some in critical condition.

Lightning kills ⁠hundreds ​of people every year in Bangladesh, which declared lightning strikes a natural disaster in 2016 ⁠after more than 200 people ​died in the month of May alone, including 82 people on a single day.

Experts say the ⁠rise in fatal lightning strikes is linked to deforestation, which has led to the disappearance of many tall trees that previously ​helped draw lightning away ⁠from people.

Lightning-related fatalities are common during the pre-monsoon ​months of April to ‌June, when rising heat and ​humidity create unstable weather conditions.

(Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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