Eight people have been killed and at least 11 others injured by lightning strikes in separate incidents in five districts- Netrakona, Panchagarh, Rajshahi, Naogaon and Moulvibazar, in three days.
NETRAKONA: A young man was killed by lightning strike in Kendua Upazila of the district on Monday morning.
The deceased was identified as Arju Mia, 25, a resident of Sat Baruka Village under Sandikona Union in the upazila.
Police and local sources said thunderbolt struck the young man in the morning while he was taking bath in a pond next to his house, which left him critically injured.
Locals rescued him and took to Nandail Upazila Health Complex, where he was declared dead by the on-duty doctor.
Officer-in-Charge (OC) of Kendua Police Station (PS) Ali Hossain confirmed the incident.
Severe floods are reported to have continued in Germy and Bileh Savar districts in northwestern Ardabil Province on Monday, leaving several people killed or missing and damage to roads and people's homes.
As a result of the hailstorm, heavy rain and subsequent flash floods, the roofs of private homes in Bileh Savar and Jafarabad were damaged and many trees were uprooted, Bileh Savar County governor Sahebali Asghari said.
The governor said that heavy rain followed by floods along with strong wind caused damage to as many as 200 private homes in villages in Bileh Savar County.
A large waterspout was seen swirling next to the I-10 Twin Span Bridge in New Orleans, Louisiana, as scattered storms moved through the region, on Sunday, June 18. Garrett Foster told Storyful he was driving towards the city with his partner when they spotted the confirmed waterspout near Lake Borgne.
"Half way into the I-10 Twin Span Bridge right outside of New Orleans, [my partner and I] looked to our left and saw a ginormous waterspout heading our way," Foster told Storyful. "We looked at each other in disbelief and contemplated whether or not we should be worried and what we would do if the waterspout hit us," he said. "We ended up putting the pedal to the metal and racing off the bridge safe and sound... We hope everyone else who was on that bridge made it home safely."
At least three people died and another 12 are missing amid heavy floods in Brazil's southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazilian media report.
On Friday, at least 16 municipalities in Rio Grande do Sul were affected by floods and landslides caused by an extratropical cyclone.
Three people have died and another 12 are missing amid the floods, the G1 news portal reported on Friday, citing local authorities.
About 350,000 households and businesses remain without electricity in Rio Grande do Sul and a number of municipalities have declared an emergency. School classes have been cancelled in over 20 municipalities.
Comment: Update June 19
AFP reports:
Cyclone leaves 13 dead, three missing in southern Brazil as record rain floods streets
A cyclone which tore through southern Brazil has killed at least 13 people and forced thousands from their homes.
Torrential rain and strong winds have caused damage in dozens of towns in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, including its capital Porto Alegre — the latest in a string of weather-related disasters to hit South America's biggest country.
Brazil's civil defence agency on Sunday (local time) said two more bodies were discovered in the coastal town of Caraa, one of the hardest hit by the weather on Thursday and Friday.
There were still three people missing in Caraa on Sunday, after the number was revised down from Saturday's total of 20.
The town of Tramandai was also hit hard, with recorded wind speeds of more than 100 kilometres per hour, according to official figures.
A four-month-old baby is among the fatalities, according to local media, which broadcast footage of a car being swept into a cemetery by powerful winds.
"The water came up to our waist inside the house. Thank God, the firemen arrived quickly and got us out on boats," a woman in the town of Sao Leopoldo told the newspaper Estadao, which did not give her name.
Other people were evacuated by helicopter.
Nearly 5,000 people were left with damaged houses and on Sunday around 84,000 people were without power.
Authorities had pre-emptively evacuated some 80 people from high-risk areas.
Rio Grande do Sul Governor Eduardo Leite visited the worst-affected areas by helicopter on Saturday together with government and rescue officials.
In Caraa, the governor visited a community centre used to shelter hundreds of people whose homes were damaged by the storm.
"The situation in Caraa worries us deeply," he said.
"It is essential that we can, in an integrated manner, quickly map the main affected areas and identify the people who need support."
Mr Leite said state firefighters had rescued about 2,400 people in the past two days.
"Our main objective at this moment is to protect and save human lives, rescue people who are isolated, locate the missing and support families," Mr Leite said.
In Sao Leopoldo, half an hour from Porto Alegre, 246 millimetres of rain fell in 18 hours, "a level never seen before in the history" of the city of 240,000 inhabitants, stressed Porto Alegre Mayor Ary Jose Vanazzi.
On Sunday, streets in the towns of Novo Hamburgo, Lindolfo Collor and Sao Leopoldo were still flooded.
As the rain stopped, soldiers were able to carry out rescue operations in Novo Hamburgo.
Further rainfall and cold temperatures are expected in the middle of next week, however, potentially further exacerbating the situation for those already impacted.
Days of torrential downpours have caused flooding in Serbia and Bosnia, forcing authorities to declare a state of emergency in many areas on Friday, with the rain not expected to let up for another day.
In Serbia, 1,300 rescuers and 22 boats were deployed to evacuate dozens of people in various locations, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
Near the southwestern city of Kraljevo, a river tore away a bridge. In central Serbia, rescuers had to evacuate 12 people from their homes in Kragujevac due to the Lepenica river bursting its banks, said mayor Nikola Dasic, while 22 people were rescued from a village near the town of Jagodina.
Cuatro Canadas and Okinawa villages, in the southern soy-rich Santa Cruz region, were the worst hit as the downpour swamped crops and aisled locals in their houses surrounded by water.
Footage captured on Friday showed many streets and pathways turned into rivers with rescue teams on boats to take residents out and save what belongings they could, including animals.
As thunderstorms rolled into the Tampa Bay area Friday evening, a small waterspout that moved ashore at Clearwater Beach sent two people to the hospital.
It happened at around 4 p.m. The 63-year-old man and a woman said to be 70 years old, both from Kansas, were taken to Morton Plant Hospital as a precaution with "very minor injuries," police said. The couple was at Barefoot Beach House restaurant when some rough weather rolled through, authorities reported.
Life-threatening flash flooding swept across swaths of Pensacola, Florida early Friday morning as deadly severe thunderstorms dumped several inches of rain and brought a possible tornado, leaving one person dead and parts of the region buried under feet of water.
Comment: Update June 19
AFP reports: