Local residents walk past damages in Bihucourt, northern France, after a tornado hit the region. /Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP
Tornado-like storms that tore through northern France sheared off part of a church roof, felled trees and power lines and left scores of people without a safe place to live, authorities said.
One person suffered light injuries in the storms and some 150 people were evacuated, according to the regional administration for the Pas-de-Calais region.
Images shared online showed dark clouds suddenly spinning over fields as objects flew through the air. The winds ripped away sections of the roof of the village church in Bihucourt and damaged its bell tower. Roof beams and shingles littered roads, along with trees and power lines.
READ MORE
What is the European Political Community?
Huawei 'disappointed' as UK steps up ban
China-UK Bridge Builders: James Trapp
The firefighter service in the Pas-de-Calais region described "tornado-type" winds that hit Bihucourt, Ervillers and Hendecourt-les-Cagnicourt.
Bihucourt mayor Benoit-Vincent Caille said on public broadcaster France-Info that the storm "ravaged the near-totality of the village. ... Some homes were razed, collapsed, there were roofs ripped off. The church is partially destroyed".
Some 70 kilometers to the south, fierce winds damaged about 60 homes and other buildings in the French towns of Conty and O-de-Selle, according to local authorities, and villagers were evacuated.
Strong winds also buffeted Belgium and the Netherlands but no major damage was reported.