At least 14 people were killed after lightning strikes hit several parts of Bangladesh, officials said on Monday, as seasonal thunderstorms swept across the country.

The deaths were reported from several districts after sudden storms brought heavy rain and intense lightning.

Most of the victims were farmers working in open fields and laborers caught in exposed areas, local authorities said. Several other people were injured and taken to nearby hospitals, with some in critical condition.

People are crossing the road in torrential rain in Dhaka,Bangladesh on 25 August 2024. (credit:  ABU SUFIAN JEWEL/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
People are crossing the road in torrential rain in Dhaka,Bangladesh on 25 August 2024. (credit: ABU SUFIAN JEWEL/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

Hundreds killed by lightning yearly in Bangladesh

Lightning kills hundreds of people every year in Bangladesh, which declared lightning strikes a natural disaster in 2016 after more than 200 people died in the month of May alone, including 82 people on a single day.

Experts say the rise in fatal lightning strikes is linked to deforestation, which has led to the disappearance of many tall trees that previously helped draw lightning away from people.

Lightning-related fatalities are common during the pre-monsoon months of April to June, when rising heat and humidity create unstable weather conditions.