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Littleover house catches fire amid multiple lightning strikes

Littleover house catches fire amid multiple lightning strikes Littleover house catches fire amid multiple lightning strikes
Dave Marubbi A house, at night, with its roof on fire and a firefighter spraying water on the flames with a hose jet.Dave Marubbi

Firefighters said it was not safe to use their aerial ladder to deal with the blaze because of the storm

A house in Derby has been damaged by a fire believed to have been started by a lightning strike.

Derbyshire Fire and Rescue Service (DFRS) said it was called to the property in Blagreaves Lane, Littleover, just before 21:00 BST on Saturday.

It said six fire crews were deployed to deal with the fire in the roof of the house.

Nobody was injured but the house was damaged, the fire service said.

A man wearing a turban and glasses looking sad. He is dressed in a black fleece and rain coat.

Owner of the house, Parmjit Singh Bilan, said he was in shock

Fire crews were unable to use their aerial ladder to deal with the blaze because it was not safe to do so in the stormy weather.

However, they were able to bring the flames under control before leaving the scene in the early hours of Sunday.

Homeowner Parmjit Singh Bilan said: “You just don’t expect it to be you.

“We’re in a bit of shock. We managed to get about half hour kip, but [my] head’s pounding – there’s not a lot we can do, it’s happened.”

The top of a house showing a roof which has been damaged and patched up after a lightning strike caused it to set on fire. The top window, in the roof, is missing.

A neighbour said he jumped out of the bath to see fallen debris after the lightning strike

Neighbour Dave Marubbi, 53, said he called 999.

“I was in the bath, after working in the garden,” he told the BBC.

“My house is next to it and the lightning strike was 30 feet from my bathroom.

“The lightning strike and the thunderclap came at the same time and I thought that’s very close.

“I jumped out of the bath and looked out of the window to see fallen debris, and I started to see an orange reflection in the trees.”

Carrie Anne An image of lightning taken through a window illuminating a garden with sheds and trees.Carrie Anne

Lightning strikes were reported across the East Midlands, including in Selston in Nottinghamshire

The fire service said it had also been called to reports of a house that was believed to have been struck by lightning in Dannah Street, in Ripley, at 20:41 on Saturday.

Nobody was injured but crews isolated the gas and electric supplies to make the property safe.

Earlier, at 16:51, the fire service was called after lightning hit cabling on flats in Jubilee Close in Melbourne where an internal wall had blown down.

There was a further call at 16:58 to a home in Castle Street, Melbourne, where a woman was believed to have been affected by the lightning strike.

She was handed into the care of East Midlands Ambulance Service, the fire service said.

Cars with their headlights on driving through floodwater on a road

St Augustine’s Road, in Leicester, was largely submerged

Fire service group manager David Diggins said: “It has been a busy night for the county’s emergency services dealing with the impact of a significant thunderstorm.

“Firefighters were mobilised by our control room operators to several properties believed to have been hit by lightning.”

The stormy weather affected other parts of the East Midlands with some flash flooding reported on roads in Leicester and Market Harborough town centre.

More than 45,000 properties were affected by power cuts in towns and villages, including Desford and Market Bosworth, to the west of Leicester during stormy weather at 16:30 Saturday.

National Grid said there was a fault on its high voltage overhead network, but that power had been restored to all properties by 20:30.

Paula Mullin The front doors of Boots a shop, with signs on saying "we're sorry, but the store is currently closed". Paula Mullin

A Boots store in Nottingham was shut after a roof leak and flood in the car park

The roof of the Asda store in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire, leaked at about 20:00 on Saturday following heavy rain, causing the store to close early.

An Asda spokesperson said: “A roof survey is ongoing, and the store is now open as usual.”

Other shops were also affected by the weather, including Boots at Riverside Retail Park, in Nottingham.

The store briefly closed on Sunday morning due to flooding in the car park and a leak in the roof.

Poundland, located at the same retail park, suffered water damage from a leaking roof.

A spokesman said the shop was closed on Sunday while the damage was assessed and a clean-up took place.

This article was originally published at www.bbc.com

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