The Mail on Sunday

18 TRILLION gallons of water

That’s what deadly Hurricane Florence will have dumped by the time it f inally peters out

- By Caroline Graham and Mark Wood

DONALD Trump declared a state of emergency in North Carolina last night as ‘catastroph­ic’ floods caused by Hurricane Florence claimed at least eight lives and left a trail of devastatio­n.

Winds of up to 90mph swirling 350-miles wide have ravaged North and South Carolina, downing trees and power lines and forcing more than a million people to flee. About 40 in of rain fell in 24 hours.

One meteorolog­ist predicted that Florence, which at its peak was rated a Category 4 hurricane, would dump an incredible 18 trillion gallons of rainfall on the area by the time it finally peters out on Wednesday.

Emergency officials say they expect the death toll to rise and predict at least $1 billion (£765 mil- lion) worth of damage. The President’s declaratio­n will release government funds to help combat the disaster, described by experts as potentiall­y the worst storm since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Mother Lesha Murphy-Johnson and her eight-week-old baby Zac died when a tree fell on to the roof of their home in Wilmington, North Carolina.

Firefighte­rs who had franticall­y tried to lift the tree knelt in a circle to pray after it became apparent there was nothing more they could do to save them.

In Lenoir County, a 78-year-old man was electrocut­ed when he tried to fix a generator. In Jacksonvil­le, North Carolina, more than 60 people had to be rescued from a hotel that collapsed.

President Trump is expected to visit the region this week.

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 ??  ?? TRAIL OF DESTRUCTIO­N: The fallen tree that killed a mother and baby, left, and a volunteer rescues a dog
TRAIL OF DESTRUCTIO­N: The fallen tree that killed a mother and baby, left, and a volunteer rescues a dog

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