Kuwait Times

Tornadoes hit central US; 2 die

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LITTLE ROCK: Tornadoes touched down in the upper Midwest and northern Arkansas on Tuesday, killing at least two people, as a spring-like storm system posed a risk to 45 million people. Compact but strong storms known as supercells raked parts of the central US, causing damage from Arkansas to Iowa and Illinois. Wind-whipped wildfires destroyed homes in Texas. At Ottawa, Illinois, state Emergency Management Agency spokeswoma­n Patti Thompson said a tornado victim was killed by an uprooted tree.

Minor injuries were also reported at an Ottawa nursing home, but Thompson said the number of those hurt in the twisters was not known. Meanwhile, one person was killed when an apparent tornado ripped through Perry County, Missouri, about 80 miles south of St Louis. Eight to 10 homes near the small town of Perryville were badly damaged and winds were so strong that several vehicles were blown off of Interstate 55. Perry County Clerk Jared Kutz said search and rescue crews were going door-to-door and checking the highway to see if there were other victims.

Missouri Gov Eric Greitens said in a statement that a tornado was confirmed in Perry County. Authoritie­s have not released any informatio­n about the person killed. Forecaster­s were particular­ly concerned that the worst of the weather developed after nightfall - and worried it would continue overnight and hit communitie­s while people slept. While weather conditions typically improve after nightfall, as the atmosphere cools, the Storm Prediction Center posted tornado watches late Tuesday for the area from eastern Kansas and Oklahoma to near Cincinnati. It warned that significan­t tornadoes with winds above 111 mph were possible until 4 am Central time. “Some increase in storm coverage is likely through the overnight hours,” one of its advisories said.

The Oklahoma-based forecast center said 45 million people from Texas to Ohio faced some risk of bad weather. The highest threat level in effect, warning of a “moderate risk” for severe weather, covered the area from southweste­rn Missouri into Indiana. Hundreds of people, including many school children, took shelter at Bald Knob High School in Arkansas after a tornado warning was posted for the area. The school is hosting a state basketball tournament for smaller schools this week. Moments earlier, the storm caused damage in Higginson, a town of 621, the White County Sheriff’s Office said.

Photos posted on social media showed basketball fans on the floor in the school’s designated safe area. The Bald Knob storm was part of the same system that produced a wall cloud near Mayflower, Arkansas, which was hit in 2014 by a tornado with winds approachin­g 200 mph. The storm crossed Interstate 40 between Little Rock and Conway, but there were no reports that a funnel cloud touched down. The Storm Prediction Center had warned that some of Tuesday’s storms would track over long distances. The Arkansas storm held together for more than 100 miles, though it did not produce tornadoes. The Missouri Department of Transporta­tion closed Interstate 55 in both directions because of storm damage in Perryville. — AP

 ??  ?? PENNSYLVAN­IA: Robert Galonis pauses before he begins to chainsaw away debris from a relative’s house after a tornado touched down in the area in Pittston Township, Pa. — AP
PENNSYLVAN­IA: Robert Galonis pauses before he begins to chainsaw away debris from a relative’s house after a tornado touched down in the area in Pittston Township, Pa. — AP

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