China Daily (Hong Kong)

Floodwater­s rise as storm continues

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GRIFTON, North Carolina — Catastroph­ic floods raised the threat of dam breaks and landslides across the southeaste­rn United States on Monday, prolonging the agony caused by a killer hurricane that has left more than a dozen people dead and billions of dollars in damage.

Downgraded to a tropical depression, Florence slowly crawled over South and North Carolina, dumping heavy rains on already floodswoll­en river basins that authoritie­s warned could bring more death and destructio­n.

The National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center warned on Sunday night of “heavy and excessive rainfall over the next couple of days”.

There is an “elevated risk for landslides” in western North Carolina and southwest Virginia, as well as danger of “catastroph­ic and lifethreat­ening flash flooding” in parts of the Carolinas, it said.

“A lot of people have evacuated already,” said Denise Harper, a resident of Grifton, a small North Carolina town threatened by rising water levels in a nearby creek and the River Neuse. “It’s worrying to watch the water slowly rising.”

At least 15 people have died since Florence made landfall on Friday as a Category 1 hurricane near Wrightsvil­le Beach, 10 in North Carolina and five in South Carolina.

“Unfortunat­ely we’ve still got several days to go,” Brock Long, administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, told Fox News.

Long said more havoc lays ahead as the storm broadens its geographic scope over regions deeply saturated with water.

Of particular concern were the risks to dams, already stressed by heavy rainfall from a tropical storm earlier in the month, he said, urging citizens to heed official warnings about what was now a “flood event”.

“What we have to focus on are there any dams that are potentiall­y going to break.”

“People fail to heed warnings and get out or they get into the flood waters trying to escape their home. And that’s where you start to see deaths escalate,” he told CBS News.

“Even though hurricanes are categorize­d by wind, it’s the water that really causes the most loss of life.”

Electrocut­ion risk

With the rain pausing for the first time since Friday, local resident Logan Sosebee pulled out his kayak to carry food and supplies to those who need it on the other side of the flooded river.

“We still have no water and power, so I’m happy to help if I can, there’s nothing else to do,” he said. “But the current is crazy.”

“The water ... has gone up 10-15 feet (3 to 4.5 meters) in a few days and it’s supposed to keep rising for a few days. I’m a bit worried for my home.”

Even as some residents began returning to their homes, officials warned of a long road to recovery ahead.

“I think that the storm is likely going to produce impacts greater than Hurricane Matthew,” Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina said on Fox News, referring to a Category 5 storm that struck in 2016, killing 26 in the state.

“The agricultur­e industry, the largest industry in our state is hard-hit. We will have to sort out the crop damage,” he continued, adding: “I think that it’s fair to say in terms of economic impact rebuilding that we are talking in the billions of dollars.”

 ?? JONATHAN DRAKE / REUTERS ?? One-year-old Oliver Kelly cries as he is carried off a sheriff’s airboat during his rescue from rising floodwater­s in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in Leland, North Carolina, on Sunday.
JONATHAN DRAKE / REUTERS One-year-old Oliver Kelly cries as he is carried off a sheriff’s airboat during his rescue from rising floodwater­s in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in Leland, North Carolina, on Sunday.

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