Weather around the world.
The world's weather turned wild over the Christmas holiday week, with devastating storms, tornadoes and wildfires wreaking havoc across the globe.
Torrential rains
in parts of South America, blamed on El Nino, have displaced more than
150,000 people across Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay.
In
the United States, a mammoth storm system engulfing much of the country
has claimed at least 24 lives, including four soldiers in Missouri.
Counting victims from other storms earlier last week, the death toll is
43.
Swaths of northern England have been submerged with mammoth flooding, prompting evacuations and dozens of urgent warnings.
Authorities in Spain and Australia, meanwhile, are fighting to get devastating fires under control.
Here's what's going on across the globe:
Australia: Wildfires
have raged across thousands of
hectares of land left vulnerable by exceptionally dry weather in the
southern state of Victoria. The fires, one of which consumed at least
116 homes over Christmas, are expected to continue to burn for weeks.
Britain: The army has
been sent in to help deal with the flooding across northern England,
which local residents say is the worst in living memory for some areas.
Authorities
issued 24 severe flood warnings Sunday, each one meaning there is a
"danger to life." Thousands of people have been left without
electricity.
British Prime Minister
David Cameron chaired an emergency Cabinet meeting Sunday and said more
troops will be deployed to assist with the response to the flooding.
.
Spain: Dozens of wildfires have been burning for over a week in remote regions of northern and central Spain.
The
government deployed three water-dropping planes to battle more than 40
fires in the regions of Asturias and Avila, which have been experiencing
unusually warm weather, Agence France-Presse reported Sunday.
A helicopter battling a fire in Asturias crashed Wednesday, killing the pilot, the aircraft's sole occupant.
Paraguay: In Paraguay, the hardest-hit country, more
than 130,000 people were evacuated. In the city of Alberdi, residents
fled as walls holding back water appeared on the verge of collapse,
authorities said.
Brazil: At least 38 cities were inundated, with Rio
Grande do Sul state taking the biggest hit, authorities said. More than
1,800 families were forced to leave their homes.
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