Nine schoolchildren are in hospital in the South African city of
Johannesburg after being hit by lightning in two separate incidents,
officials say.
BBC reports that five boys aged between 16 and 18
were admitted to hospital on Tuesday after a lightning bolt hit a
cricket field at their school.
Four 16-year-old girls were struck on Monday on their way back home from school in Soweto.
South Africa is prone to lightning during its summer rainy season.
According to the South African Weather Service, more than 260 people are killed by lightning in the country each year.
The
lightning struck as the cricketers from King Edward VII School were
pulling covers over the pitch after the storm began. Nine boys were
taken to hospital and four were later discharged.
Education
officials say two of the boys remain in a critical condition, as does
one of the girls from Protea Glen Secondary School.
Following the
incidents, South African Weather Service forecaster Puseletso Mofokeng
said there was a common misconception that lightning mainly struck
during heavy rain or a severe storm.
“There doesn’t have to be
rainfall for lightning to strike, and when a storm is past it can still
be dangerous,” the South African Press Association quotes him as saying.
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
9 South Africa Pupils Struck By Lightning
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