Three people have died and hundreds more have been injured after heavy storms brought scorpions into the streets and homes of a city in southern Egypt, state-run media reported. Heavy rainfall, thunder, dust storms, and snowfall in the southern city of Aswan last week caused both scorpions and snakes to come out of their hiding places, Al-Ahram, a government-run Egyptian newspaper, reported. As of Nov. 13, at least 450 people were injured due to scorpion stings in the city, a health ministry official told Al-Ahram. The victims have since been hospitalized and anti-venom to disable and neutralize the venom has been made available at hospitals and medical units across the city, while extra amounts of the anti-venom have been sent to rural villages near the mountains. The Al-Ahram reported the deaths, citing Ehab Hanafy, the Health Ministry’s undersecretary in Aswan, but did not elaborate on the cause. On Sunday, Aswan Gov. Ashraf Attia said that at least 503 people were hospitalized with injuries from scorpion …