In this Monday, May 29, 2017 photo vehicles are covered with a fallen tree following a storm, in a residential area of Moscow, Russia. Thunderstorms and strong winds buffeted Moscow and its surrounding areas on Monday, killing 11 people and injuring dozens, Russian officials said.
 (Sergey Vedyashkin/Moscow News Agency photo via AP)
Deadly storm causes chaos across Moscow
00:45 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

The storm struck late Monday

At least 22 children were hospitalized

Moscow CNN  — 

A fierce storm whipped through Moscow on Monday, killing 16 people, toppling thousands of trees and damaging several buildings, officials said.

Eleven people were killed in Moscow and three others elsewhere in the region, said Svetlana Petrenko, spokeswoman for the Russian Investigative Committee. It’s not clear where the other two victims died.

State-run news agency Tass reported that 168 people were injured in the storm – the deadliest in years – and 146 were hospitalized, according to Alexei Khripun, who leads Moscow’s department of health.

Alexander Golod's pyramid in Istrinsky District, Moscow Region, was destroyed by the storm.

Of the 108 people who remain in the hospital, 22 are children. Tass said the injuries range from cuts and bruises to head and spine injuries.

“I can’t remember within my recollection any other such calamity with the number of dead and injured as big as this one,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin told Tass, adding that the families of those killed will receive 1 million rubles ($17,760) each.

Thousands of trees were knocked down by the storm on May 29.

CNN meteorologist Taylor Ward said most of the damage appeared to come from strong straight-line winds, with gusts measuring 101 kph (63 mph).

According to Sobyanin, the storm uprooted about 3,500 trees. Transportation was affected in the capital and more than 50 flights were delayed in the region, Tass reported.

A woman walks past a fallen tree on a car after a heavy storm in Moscow.

The surrounding region endured similar damage, with 3,000 trees blown down, 322 cars damaged and the roofs of 42 houses and maternity clinics sustaining damage, Tass said.

In 1998, a strong wind storm hit Moscow, killing as many as 11 people.

Tim Lister reported from Moscow, with James Masters writing in London. Emma Burrows contributed to this report.