US storm system kills 19, tornado hits Mississippi city
Updated: 2014-04-29 10:39
(Agencies)
|
||||||||
TUPELO, Miss - On a second day of ferocious storms that have claimed at least 19 lives in the southern United States, a tornado tore through the Mississippi town of Tupelo on Monday causing widespread destruction to homes and businesses, according to witnesses and local emergency officials.
A man casts aside bricks while searching in the rubble of a destroyed house after a tornado hit the town of Vilonia, Arkansas, April 28, 2014. [Photo/Agencies] |
At least one person was killed in the city of about 35,000 in the northeast of the state and the birthplace of Elvis Presley.
Most of the deaths from the violent storms occurred on Sunday when tornadoes tossed cars like toys in Arkansas and other states.
Monday's twister went through the north and west of Tupelo at about 3 pm (1800 GMT), damaging hundreds of homes and businesses, downing power lines and toppling trees, according to the National Weather Service.
"It was real bad. We're trying to pull people out," Tupelo Police Chief Bart Aguirre, told Reuters, referring to emergency crews going house to house, searching damaged buildings.
"It's a very serious situation," said Tupelo Mayor Jason Shelton. "I am just encouraging everyone to stay inside and be weather aware. There is still a very real danger of another line coming through and people still need to be inside."
Main roads in and out of Tupelo were closed and the city announced a 9 pm (0200 GMT) curfew. Some residential areas were closed off as emergency crews checked downed power lines and gas leaks.
Residents whose homes were destroyed took refuge in a Red Cross shelter at a downtown sports arena.
"I heard snapping and I said, 'Get down on the floor!' And then the trees started falling over," said Moe Kirk Bristow of Tupelo.
"Three trees fell on her house, one which flattened my car port and two cars and almost every big tree in her neighborhood was felled," Bristow said.
"I haven't seen a house yet that doesn't have a tree through it or on it, so it's bad," she added.
Social security worker Adrian Brim described receiving a text message from her teenage sons who were home with her husband that said, "the house is shaking" as the twister passed.
"I was just praying God would take care of them," she said. "The house survived with roof and fence damage."
Another woman, Reginia DeWalt said she was awakened when the tornado went by. "It sounded like a big pressure washer - but worse," she said.
Parts of Alabama, western Georgia and Tennessee also were at risk as the storm system that produced the series of tornadoes headed east toward the Mid-Atlantic states.
Rescue workers, volunteers and victims have been sifting through the rubble in the hardest-hit state of Arkansas, looking for survivors in central Faulkner County where a tornado reduced homes to splinters, snapped power lines and mangled trees.
Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe said at least 15 people had died statewide in the storm that authorities said produced the first fatalities of this year's US tornado season. He previously told a news conference 16 had been killed but later said there was a mistake in calculation.
Nine of the victims on Sunday came from the same street in the town of Vilonia, with a population of about 4,100, where a new intermediate school set to open in August was heavily damaged by a tractor trailer blown into its roof. A steel farm shop anchored to concrete was erased from the landscape.
Beebe told reporters of the capricious nature of tornadoes. He said a woman died when the door of her home's reinforced safe room collapsed, while a father and three daughters survived by seeking shelter in a bathtub that was flipped over in winds that leveled the house.
The Arkansas National Guard was deployed to sift through the wreckage. Beebe declared a state of disaster for Faulkner and two other counties.
One person was killed in neighboring Oklahoma and another in Iowa, state authorities said.
A tornado in Baxter Springs, Kansas, that touched down on Sunday evening destroyed as many as 70 homes and 25 businesses and injured 34 people of whom nine were hospitalized, state and county officials said. One person was killed in Kansas, likely due to the same storm system, officials said.
|
|
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Beijing integrates with Tianjin, Hebei |
Enemies share eternity together |
Expats flee big, smoggy cities |
Life after an only child dies |
Parents put kindergartens to the test |
Nomads change for education |
Today's Top News
Bill Gates urges more in China to help poor
Philippine pact gives US access to air, sea bases
Obama sets new sanctions on Russia
S China joint college goes global
US imposes sanctions on Russia
Xi named again in Time's top 100 list
Huawei still seeks US sales
It's lights out for US TV series ordered off sites
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |