Climate Change Effect: Temperature Rises in Poland, Lithuania; Nearly 150 People Died
Nearly 150 people drowned, the vast majority of them men, in Poland and neighbouring Lithuania in June as temperatures soared to record highs, officials said on Monday.
Warsaw, July 1: Nearly 150 people drowned, the vast majority of them men, in Poland and neighbouring Lithuania in June as temperatures soared to record highs, officials said on Monday.
Poland's Government Centre for Security (RCB) said that 113 people drowned in June, including ten on Sunday alone, as the EU country of 38 million people sizzled. Europe Heatwave: France Records All-Time Hottest Temperature at 44.3 Degrees Celsius.
"As successive heatwaves set in, not a day went by in June without someone drowning," Bozena Wysocka, an RCB spokeswoman told AFP on Monday, adding that 90 percent of the victims were male. Alcohol consumption and recklessness were cited among the leading causes.
Thirty-two people drowned in neighbouring Lithuania, fire and rescue officials said. The death toll, which included 26 men, was the highest in the last five years in the Baltic state of 2.8 million.
Poland recorded its highest ever June temperature with mercury soaring to 38.2 degrees Celsius. Lithuanian temperatures also hit a record June high of 35.7 degrees Celsius (96.2 degrees Fahrenheit), forcing school closures and threatening crops.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jul 01, 2019 04:13 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).