The death toll from storms that hit Italy and sparked major flooding in the centre of the country has risen to 11.
Authorities said today that two people are still unaccounted for.
The storms began on Thursday night with more than 400 millimetres of rain falling in some places in just a few hours.
"Searches are ongoing for the two missing," said a statement from police in Ancona.
Local press reports said the two were an 8-year-old child and a 56-year-old woman.
Across the area around Ancona, the port capital of the central eastern Marche region, streets were turned into rivers, cars swept into piles by the floodwaters, furniture washed out of homes and thick mud left everywhere.
More rain was expected in the area on Saturday, with authorities urging people to stay at home.
"Leave the ground floors of your homes and take shelter in the upper floors," the mayor of Senigallia, Massimo Olivetti, said.
The deadly storms hit just days before the 25 September general elections in the country.
Italy has been hit by severe drought this year, followed by violent end-of-summer storms, and many have drawn the link with climate change - a subject which had taken a back seat during the election campaign.
This summer's drought, the worst in 70 years, drained the Po River, Italy's largest water reservoir.
(With input from agencies)