A severe rainstorm killed at least nine people, including a child, in Ukraine's Odesa, emergency services said early on Wednesday. Rescuers worked through the night, battling havoc from floods.
"In seven hours, Odesa received almost a two-month norm of rainfall. No storm sewer system can withstand such a load," the mayor of Odesa Gennadiy Trukhanov said on Telegram.
"Currently, nine people are known to have died, including one child," the State Emergency Service said in a separate post.
Hundreds of rescuers worked overnight to evacuate people from flooded areas, remove cars and pump water out of buildings, the service said.
It posted pictures of passengers being taken off a flooded bus and cars pulled from the water.
A total of 362 people were rescued in the continuing effort, the service added.
Mayor Trukhanov acknowledged the situation was challenging but said it was "under control.”
"Work continues without a break -- both day and night," Trukhanov said.
The deadly weather adds to the challenges facing emergency services as Ukraine endures daily attacks by Russia, which controls about 20 percent of its territory three-and-a-half years after Moscow launched its large-scale invasion.
A man died Wednesday morning in a Russian attack on the southern city of Kherson, according to the local military administration.
Six people, including a policeman, were wounded in overnight strikes in the northeast region of Kharkiv, according to the national police.