At least seven people have died and nine others have been injured as flooding caused by torrential rain hit parts of South Korea’s capital Seoul.
Heavy downpours on Monday night, August 8 submerged roads, flooded metro stations and caused blackouts across the city and neighbouring provinces.
Some areas received the highest rate of rainfall in 80 years, South Korea’s meteorological agency said.
Weather officials forecast the rain was likely to continue over several days.
Parts of Seoul, the western port city of Incheon and Gyeonggi province surrounding Seoul charted rainfall of over 10cm of rain per hour on Monday night, according to Yonhap news agency.
Also, Seoul’s Dongjak district recorded more than 141.5 mm of rain per hour – the highest rate since 1942, according to South Korea’s Meterological Agency (KMA).
Images published on social media showed floodwater gushing down the steps of metro staircases, parked cars submerged up to their windows and people making their way across streets in water at knee length.
At least five people died in Seoul and two others in the neighbouring Gyeonggi province as of Tuesday morning, according to South Korea’s Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters.
The four died after being trapped in flooded buildings, one was electrocuted, one person was found under the wreckage of a bus stop and another died in a landslide. At least nine others were injured and six others reported missing.
At least 163 people in Seoul have been made homeless and have taken shelter in schools and public facilities, according to Yonhap since the rain began.