Two die after a fierce rare weather system batters the Italian island of Sicily
The Medicane or Mediterranean cyclone, hit as sea levels were much warmer than average
The following written content from Siba Jackson
At least two people have died after a rare cyclonic storm battered Sicily leaving parts of the Italian island submerged.
Town squares and streets have become lakes as widespread flooding left the city of Catania and surrounding areas underwater.
More than 300mm (11.8in) of rain – almost half the average amount expected on the Mediterranean island in a year – fell in just a few hours on Sunday, according to the Sicilian farmers’ association.
The downpours have prompted emergency authorities to issue the highest red alert warning for the northern tip of Sicily and Calabria in southern Italy, warning of a potential risk to life and damage to property.
A man’s body was found under a car as torrential winds and rain swept through the town of Gravina, north of Catania, according to volunteer rescue workers.
The body of another man, 67, was found in a citrus grove far from where his car was hit by rising waters and mud, southwest of Catania, on Monday.
His wife has been reported missing, the emergency services said – as rescue workers battle rapidly worsening conditions.
A low-pressure system in the central Mediterranean has already brought significant rain, with more heavy rain expected over the next few days.
In the last 48 hours, 199.6mm of rain has been recorded in the Calabria region of southwest Italy.Further heavy showers, thunderstorms or longer spells of rain will bring another 100-200mm of rain to southwest Italy and Sicily over the next few days.
As much as 250mm is possible in some spots. Flooding is a big concern, with lightning, large hail and gusty winds additional hazards.
Red rainfall and thunderstorm warnings cover south-west Italy until Wednesday and Sicily until the end of Thursday.
According to the Met Office, rainfall totals could end up being more than three times the October average before the low-pressure system moves away to the north.
This extreme rainfall comes just weeks after the 12-hour European rainfall record was broken in northwest Italy.
Rossiglione in Genoa, Liguria, saw a massive 741mm of rain falling in just 12 hours on 4 October, breaking the European record.
It also follows a summer of floods in Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
“The emergency situation is widespread and extremely critical and it does not seem to be improving,” a fire service spokesman warned.
Catania mayor Salvo Pogliese has ordered all shops, except pharmacies and grocers, to close until midnight.
“I urge all people not to leave their homes except for emergencies,” he wrote in a Facebook post on Tuesday.
Floodwaters have also hit a ward at Catania’s Garibaldi hospital, according to local media reports.
Blackouts have been triggered in the city centre while a number of schools have also been forced to close.
Dozens of flights have been diverted from the area with ferry links between the southern islands cancelled.
The tropical-like storm is believed to be a medicane, sometimes referred to as a Mediterranean cyclone or hurricane.
The devastating weather system – which is expected to peak between Thursday and Friday – hit when the sea was 8C warmer than average, according to Italian weather site, Ilmeteo.it.
It comes just weeks after more than 29 inches of rain was dumped on Italy in just 12 hours – breaking a European record, with the commune of Rossiglione in Genoa, Liguria, among the worst-affected areas. Read more from Sky