Storm Babet in pictures as two dead and town evacuated during red warning downpours
Rare red weather warning issued as Met Office alerts for heavy downpours cover much of the UK
Storm Babet is wreaking havoc in the north of the UK, with two people dead, hundreds of homes flooded or evacuated and another day of torrential rain to come.
A rare red weather warning was extended for parts of Scotland as amber and yellow warnings are in place for the rest of the UK with heavy downpours set to move south on Friday and into the weekend.
The extreme weather caused flooding in some areas of eastern Scotland and led to the evacuation of hundreds of homes, while the Irish army was deployed to parts of Cork, Ireland.
Have you been affected by Storm Babet? Email alexander.butler@independent.co.uk


A 56-year-old was killed near Forfar in Angus, Scotland, after a falling tree hit a van, Police Scotland said. A 57-year-old woman was also swept into a river and found dead in Scotland.
The Met Office red weather warning began at 6pm on Thursday and has been expanded to include Dundee, Perth and Kinross, as well as Angus and Aberdeenshire, where 20ft high waves were seen crashing in Stonehaven harbour.
Amber warnings for wind and rain have been issued for parts of northern England, the Midlands and northern Wales from noon on Friday to 6am on Saturday.


Around 10,000 homes in Scotland lost power due to the storm and Angus Council evacuated more than 400 homes in the red weather warning area.
The council said yesterday: āWe have identified approximately 335 homes in Brechin, and an additional 87 homes in Tannadice and Finavon where residents will be asked to evacuate for their own safety.ā
Those affected were advised to attend three rest centres that were set up in the area.


The British Geological Survey warned Storm Babet could cause landslides in Scotland while the Scottish Environment Protection Agency said it was expecting āextensive river and surface water floodingā
In one video taken in Cork, a red car couuld be seen tipped on its side as it had fallen into part of a collapsed road, with water rushing through underneath into a field.
Trains, planes and ferries were also affected by the storm. ScotRail cancelled six services across Scotland until Saturday.


Ferry links between Aberdeen, Orkney and Shetland were also cancelled, as well as Pentland Firth crossings from Scrabster to Stromness.
Caledonian MacBrayne suspended or diverted a number of Western Isles services because of forecast āstrong winds and sea swellā.
The Ullapool-Stornoway crossing, the main link to Lewis and Harris, was cancelled all day on Thursday. The crossing from Lochboisdale in South Uist to Mallaig was diverted to Oban.

Flights were also affected, with Wideroe cancelling its round-trip from Stavanger to Aberdeen.
The chief meteorologist for the Met Office, Jason Kelly, said yesterday: ā100ā150mm of rain is expected to fall quite widely within the warning period, with some locations likely to see 200ā250mm, which is expected to cause considerable impacts with flooding likely.
āStorm Babet will track gradually northwards in the coming days, and although the most significant impacts are expected within the red and amber warning areas, there will still be wider impacts for much of the UK from this wind and rain.ā
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