Tornadoes hit two Chinese provinces, killing 12, injuring hundreds

Buildings in Wuhan destroyed with 27 houses toppled and 130 more damaged

Eight people were reported dead in Wuhan, in Hubei province, with 280 injured after Friday’s tornado ripped through the district of Caidian. Photograph: STR/AFP via Getty
Eight people were reported dead in Wuhan, in Hubei province, with 280 injured after Friday’s tornado ripped through the district of Caidian. Photograph: STR/AFP via Getty

Two tornadoes ripped through China's central city of Wuhan and a town in the eastern province of Jiangsu, killing 12 people and injuring hundreds while destroying homes and property, the official Xinhua news agency said on Saturday.

Eight people were reported dead in Wuhan, in Hubei province, with 280 injured after Friday's tornado ripped through the district of Caidian at 8.39pm, the agency said.

The tornado toppled 27 houses and damaged 130 more, as well as two tower cranes and 8,000sq m (86,111sq ft) of sheds at construction sites, it added.

“I’ve grown up in Wuhan and I’ve never seen anything like it,” one resident of the city posted on China’s Weibo app. “There’s been so much extreme weather recently.”

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An aerial view of the aftermath of a tornado in Shengze township in the Suzhou area of Jiangsu province, where four people were killed and 149 injured. Photograph: Fang Dongxu/EPA
An aerial view of the aftermath of a tornado in Shengze township in the Suzhou area of Jiangsu province, where four people were killed and 149 injured. Photograph: Fang Dongxu/EPA

Another tornado struck the town of Shengze, in the Suzhou area of tornado-prone Jiangsu province, killing four people and injuring 149, Xinhua said.

Fire officials said the winds damaged electricity facilities and toppled several factory buildings, it added.

Tornadoes often hit Jiangsu in the late spring and early summer.

China's commercial hub of Shanghai, 100km from Suzhou, was also hit by powerful thunderstorms, prompting weather officials to declare an alert.

More heavy storms were expected in Shanghai and other parts of the Yangtze river delta region later on Saturday, the state weather forecaster said.

China faces more extreme weather as a result of climate change, Jia Xiaolong, an official of the forecaster, told reporters late in April, adding that the risk of disasters such as heat waves and floods was expected to rise in coming years.– Reuters