The Star Malaysia

Mother Nature unleashes its fury

Florence turns deadly in United States as Mangkhut creates havoc in Philippine­s

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NORTH CAROLINA/ MANILA: A woman and her baby were killed when a tree fell on their house and several more storm-related deaths were reported as Hurricane Florence slammed into the Carolinas, dousing the eastern United States with torrential rain.

Four deaths were confirmed by officials as US media reported there were damages all over the state.

Hundreds of people needed to be rescued after becoming trapped in their homes by a storm surge of up to 3m in New Bern, a town of 30,000 in North Carolina at the confluence of the Trent and Neuse rivers.

It was just as bad in the Philippine­s. A strong typhoon Mangkhut packing winds of more than 200kph tore across the northern tip of the Asean nation bringing heavy rain and causing widespread power and communicat­ions outages.

The category 5 storm entered the province of Cagayan in the early hours of yesterday and sent winds and rains across the entire main island of Luzon.

Disaster authoritie­s have yet to complete damage assessment­s from Mangkhut, the 15th and most powerful storm to hit the Philippine­s this year, which had maximum gusts of 305kph and was expected to clear land on its way towards southern China and Vietnam.

In the US, Florence has been downgraded to a tropical storm by the National Hurricane Centre (NHC) but authoritie­s warned the danger was far from over, predicting that “life-threatenin­g storm surges and strong winds” would persist through the night.

“We are expecting several more days of rain,” North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper said, describing the amount of rainfall from the hurricane as a “1,000-year event.”

“Into next week our rivers are going to continue to rise and there will be more significan­t flooding,” Cooper said.

There had been three confirmed deaths from the storm and several others were being investigat­ed to determine if they were storm-related, he said.

The mother and her baby were killed in New Hanover County when a tree fell on their house, the governor said, while confirming another death in Lenoir County.

Local authoritie­s also reported a death in Pender County when downed trees prevented emergency units from reaching a woman with a medical condition.

Local media said she had suffered a heart attack.

US media later said a second man in Lenoir County died after heavy winds knocked him down as he tried to check on his dogs.

“This storm is going to continue its violent grind across our state for days,” Cooper said. “The storm is wreaking havoc on our state.”

More than 760,000 customers in North Carolina were without power and 21,000 people were being housed in 157 shelters across the state.

The White House said President Donald Trump was to visit hurricane-hit areas next week “once it is determined his travel will not disrupt any rescue or recovery efforts”.

“Great job FEMA ( First Responders and Law Enforcemen­t) — not easy, very dangerous, tremendous talent. America is proud of you,” Trump tweeted on Friday, referring to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which responds to disasters in the country.

“WE ARE COMING TO GET YOU,” he tweeted.

In the evening, maximum sustained winds had weakened to 104kph but the NHC warned residents to be alert for life-threatenin­g storm surges and “catastroph­ic freshwater flooding”.

“Flash flooding will be extreme and floodwater­s will come up quickly and seemingly out of nowhere,” the governor said.

“We’re deeply concerned for whole communitie­s which could be wiped away.”

Some of the worst flooding was in New Bern, where authoritie­s were forced to enforce a curfew.

 ??  ?? Nowhere to go: A street in Wilmington is submerged as Hurricane Florence hammered North Carolina. — Bloomberg
Nowhere to go: A street in Wilmington is submerged as Hurricane Florence hammered North Carolina. — Bloomberg

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