Lightning strikes kill one and injure dozens across Europe

Eleven people, including eight children, hurt when lightning hits party in a Paris park

A fire truck is parked at the entrance to Park Monceau in the center of Paris, France,  after a lightning bolt crashed down onto a Paris park, striking 11 people at a child’s birthday party. Photograph: AP
A fire truck is parked at the entrance to Park Monceau in the center of Paris, France, after a lightning bolt crashed down onto a Paris park, striking 11 people at a child’s birthday party. Photograph: AP

One man has died and scores of people been injured, including children, as lightning strikes hit several parts of Europe, including a park in Paris and a football pitch in Germany.

A bolt of lightning killed a man hiking in mountains in south-west Poland on Saturday. Storm lightning injured three others in the same region, and a 61-year-old man drowned in flash flooding.

In Germany, more than 30 people were taken to hospital in the western village of Hoppstädten when lightning struck at the end of a junior football match.

Three adults were seriously injured, including the referee who was hit directly and had to be resuscitated before being airlifted to hospital.

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Eleven people, including eight children, were injured when lightning struck as they were celebrating a birthday party in a park in north-west Paris.

The children, aged between seven and eight years old, had taken shelter beneath a tree when the storm arrived. A hospital spokesman said one child remained in a serious condition.

Officials said the situation would have been much worse if an off-duty firefighter, Pascal Gremillot, who happened to be close by, had not been able to quickly administer first aid and heart massages.

Eric Moulin, Paris fire service spokesman, said the group had rushed under a tree to shelter when it began to rain. "It was while they were heading for shelter, when they were still near a tree, that the lightning fell," he said.

Moulin said six of those hit were seriously injured, with three children and one adult fighting for their lives.

He said five others had been slightly injured by the lightning, including four children. Two small feet, smudged with what looked like soot, stuck out from underneath one of the blankets.

Michel Daloz of weather agency Meteo-France said that between 100 and 200 people are struck by lightning every year in the country, killing between 10 and 20 people. Storm alerts had been issued for several regions across France on Saturday, warning of the possibility of violent weather - but Paris was not on the list.

Witnesses to the German lightning strike reported that it happened without warning. “There was no rain and the sky wasn’t dark,” a police spokesman said.

Twenty-nine children, aged between nine and 11, were taken to hospital for tests but later released officials said.

German weather experts issued storm alerts for the country’s west and south. Storm Elvira had already caused torrential rain, hail and flooding in some areas.

In Rhineland-Palatinate, the region where Hoppstädten is located, bad weather caused a train to derail on Friday, but there were no injuries.

Weather experts said the storms were the result of a very “unstable” atmosphere over mainland north-west Europe. At the same time the air higher up in the atmosphere was becoming colder, creating a very “unstable” atmosphere.

Further storms are forecast over south and east Germany, the Czech Republic and Poland on Sunday.

Agencies