A huge search and rescue operation is underway in northern Turkey after flash floods along the Black Sea coast killed at least 31 people.
Kastamonu province is the worst-hit area, accounting for 29 of the deaths. Two others died in Sinop on the coast.
The floods caused some buildings to collapse, smashed several bridges, clogged some streets with wrecked cars, and cut power supplies.
This month Turkey has also had to battle huge wildfires in the south.
Those fires – which are now under control – forced thousands of locals and tourists to flee Marmaris and surrounding areas. Eight people died and more than 100,000 hectares (247,000 acres) of vegetation was devastated.
In the flooded area near the Black Sea, helicopters plucked some people from rooftops; others were rescued by boat.
More than 1,700 people have been evacuated, and as many as 330 villages are now without electricity after the floods damaged power lines.
Turkey’s latest disaster came in the week that a major UN report warned of more extreme weather events because of human-induced global warming. Flash floods and severe heatwaves are afflicting much of Europe this summer.
Mountainous areas along Turkey’s Black Sea coast are prone to flooding in the summer.
But Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said on a visit to the area on Thursday “this is the worst flood disaster I have seen”.
In neighboring Greece, the authorities say widespread wildfires are more controllable now since much-needed rainfall came in the past 48 hours.