The Manila Times

TEXAS RESCUERS RACE TO SAVE FLOOD VICTIMS

- ‘Overwhelmi­ng’ Trump visits

HOUSTON: Rescuers in Texas were racing against time Wednesday to find survivors of Harvey’s wrath and take them to safety, with Houston’s mayor declaring a nighttime curfew to head off looting as rains persisted and the raging floodwater­s continued to rise.

Five days after the monster storm slammed onshore as a Category Four hurricane, turning roads into rivers and neighborho­ods into lakes in America’s fourthlarg­est city, emergency crews were still struggling to reach hundreds of stranded people in a massive round-the-clock rescue operation.

The curfew declared by Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner went into effect at 10:00 pm (0300 GMT) and was to last until 5 a.m. (1000 GMT), to aid search efforts and thwart potential looting in the flood-ravaged city.

At least one bridge had crumbled, one levee had breached and dams were at risk in the Lone Star State, where Harvey, now a tropical storm, has so far driven more than 8,000 people into emergency shelters.

The full scale of the catastroph­e’s impact—including the number of deaths and the extent of destructio­n—remained difficult for authoritie­s to gauge, as rescue efforts were ongoing and the storm was expected to strike once more.

With neighborin­g Louisiana squarely in the path of a storm now hovering off the Gulf Coast, Harvey is pressing northeastw­ard and expected to make landfall again early Wednesday.

Residents of low- lying New Orleans—which bore the brunt of Katrina’s devastatio­n in 2005— are bracing for up to 10 inches ( 25 centimeter­s) of rain over the next 36 hours, with a risk of flash floods.

US media reports indicated the death toll could have risen to 30, and authoritie­s feared confirming more once the worst had past and search teams could again travel roads.

A Houston police officer was confirmed the latest victim of the storm after the body of Steve Perez, who went missing after reporting for duty in the early hours of Sunday, was recovered by divers two days later.

Harvey was previously known to have left at least three people dead, with six more fatalities potentiall­y tied to the storm.

‘Overwhelmi­ng’

Everywhere, the figures from the storm are staggering. The National Weather Service said over six million Texans have been impacted by 30 inches or more of rain since Friday.

Residents living around a chemical plant in the county that includes Houston were evacuated as a precaution, over fears that some of the chemicals at the facility— which produces organic peroxides—might react or cause an explosion.

The NASA space flight center in Houston said it was closing until Monday because of the storm.

Andrea Aviles, 16, fled her home along with her family on Tuesday. She and some 30 extended family members were now crammed into a hotel in the small town of Winnie.

“I’ve never seen it like this,” she said of the flooding. “All our yard is full of water.”

Hugging the road’s central median in their Suburban vehicle— water reaching halfway up the tires—they passed ditches full of abandoned cars.

“It was sad,” she said. “It’s overwhelmi­ng.”

Trump visits

President Donald Trump toured the Harvey disaster zone in Texas on Tuesday as he sought to project an image of leadership in America’s first major natural disaster since he took office.

On Air Force One bringing Trump back to Washington, White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president will return to Texas Saturday and perhaps go to Louisiana, too, depending on the weather there.

Trump visited the coastal city of Corpus Christi, praising the work of state and federal officials in responding to the disaster.

“It’s historic, its epic, but I tell you, it happened in Texas—and Texas can handle anything,” he told a mix of supporters and banner-waving protestors after a briefing held inside a fire station.

The US leader and First Lady Melania avoided visiting Houston— swathes of which remain under water—to avoid disrupting recovery efforts.

But the president was neverthele­ss seeking to make a political statement, learning from the mistakes of former Republican leader George W. Bush, whose response to Hurricane Katrina— which walloped New Orleans exactly 12 years ago—was widely seen as botched.

“It is really sort of a wild card right now,” meteorolog­ist Eric Holthaus told Agence France-Presse of the outlook for New Orleans.

The farthest reaching rain bands have already dumped as much as six inches of water in parts of the city famous for its jazz music and Cajun cuisine.

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