Safety warnings as nine die in water during UK heatwave
A child cools off in a fountain in Lyon on May 27, 2026 as a heatwave hits France. France is experiencing an "unprecedented" heatwave in May, with 13 departments on orange heat alert and peaks forecast at 38–39°C. National weather service Meteo France on May 26, 2026, registered a new nationwide monthly temperature record with a national heat index, which measures the average temperature across the country, of 24.8C surpassing Monday's 24.6C. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP
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The UK's Royal Life Saving Society on Wednesday issued
warnings on water safety after nine people died in the sea, rivers and lakes
during days of record-breaking hot weather.
Tuesday saw the records for the hottest day in May broken in
England and Wales, with temperatures reaching 35.1C at Kew Gardens near London.
Seven of the nine water-related deaths reported by police in
England and Wales since Sunday have involved teenagers or young children.
The RLSS warned that in the UK when air temperatures reach
25C, "there is a fivefold accidental drowning risk" and teenagers and
young adults are "proportionately more likely to lose their lives".
The National Water Safety Forum said Wednesday that
"periods of hot weather often correlate with a rise in accidental
drownings".
In the UK, inland waterways have accounted for more than
half of accidental drowning deaths since 2019, as water there often "stays
dangerously cold all year round", the charity said.
On Tuesday, a 17-year-old boy drowned in a lake in Cheshire
and a 12-year-old boy died after getting into difficulty in a river in
Lancashire, police from the regions of northwestern England said Wednesday.
A teenager's body was found Wednesday in a lake in
Hampshire, southern England, local media reported.
These deaths came after four earlier reported deaths from
drowning involving teenagers in England since Sunday.
In Lincolnshire in northeast England, a 15-year-old boy
drowned Sunday, police said.
The father of the boy, named as Declan Sawyer, issued a
warning to other families about the dangers of children "playing near any
rivers and lakes in the hot weather".
A teenage girl was pronounced dead after being pulled out of
water Monday at a water park in Warwickshire in central England, police said.
In Yorkshire in the northeast, one boy drowned in a
reservoir Monday and a 13-year-old boy's body was recovered early Tuesday at a
country park, police said.
Two older people also died in water-related incidents during
the heatwave: in Cornwall, a man in his 60s died Monday from a cardiac arrest
while trying to assist family members in the sea and a 72-year-old woman was
pulled from the sea in Wales on Sunday and died at the scene, according to
local police.

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