At least eight people have died after flash floods hit the Italian region of Marche overnight, authorities said.

Torrential rain falling late on Thursday caused rivers and streams to overflow and inundate coastal towns around the regional capital of Ancona.

Around 400mm of rain – half a year’s worth – were recorded in just a few hours.

Rescuers are still searching for four others, including a child who was separated from his mother when a river burst its banks.

According to one local report, a mother who managed to escape her car with her child in her arms became separated from him after being overwhelmed by water when the River Misa burst its banks.

Emergency workers managed to rescue the woman overnight but her six-year-old child is one of several still missing, local outlets report.

More than 180 firefighters are assisting in the rescue efforts, evacuating people who overnight were forced to climb up trees or get onto their roofs to escape the rising water.

Some of the rescuers used dinghy rafts and helicopters to reach trapped families, footage shows.

An unusually dry summer left nearby lands parched in the coastal area and unable to absorb the copious volumes of water falling down.

Local Mayor Ludovico Caverni said “It was like an earthquake.”  

Local officials explained that the ensuing flash floods took everyone by complete surprise.

“We were given a normal alert for rain, but nobody had expected anything like this,” Marche regional official Stefano Aguzzi told reporters.

BBC/ Oluwayemisi Owonikoko

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