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Europe is facing an intense and prolonged heatwave, with red alerts issued across France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, and Luxembourg as temperatures are forecast to exceed 40°C. French weather authorities warned that the heatwave could be one of the longest in recent years, with cities like Bordeaux already recording 42°C and Paris expected to reach 41°C. Hundreds of schools have been closed, and transport services have been disrupted as governments urge residents to take precautions.

The extreme conditions have already had deadly consequences. In southern France, two young children were found dead in a family car in an incident believed to be linked to the heat. Several elderly residents have also died amid soaring temperatures, while authorities reported multiple drowning incidents as people sought relief in rivers and lakes. Across Europe, emergency services remain on high alert as hospitals prepare for heat-related illnesses.

Meteorologists say the heatwave is being driven by hot air moving north from the Sahara Desert, trapping unusually high temperatures across western and central Europe. Scientists point to the event as another sign of global warming, noting that most of France’s recorded heatwaves have occurred since 2000. Temperatures are expected to peak midweek before gradually easing toward the end of the week.

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Portugal has recorded its hottest May temperature ever after the town of Mora hit 40.3°C, breaking a national record set more than two decades ago. The extreme heat is part of a wider heatwave affecting several Western European countries, including France, Italy, Spain and Germany.

Authorities across Europe are scrambling to respond as temperatures continue to soar. France held emergency meetings on heatwave preparedness, while schools reported dangerous indoor temperatures above 50°C. In Italy, cities including Rome were placed under red heat alerts, warning of serious health risks even for healthy people.

The intense weather has also disrupted major events, with tennis star Jannik Sinner struggling with dizziness during the French Open amid the heat. Scientists say climate change is making heatwaves more frequent and severe, with the UN warning that global temperatures are likely to remain near record highs in the coming years.

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