The Star Malaysia

Storms leave three dead

Tornadoes tear through southeaste­rn US, causing major damage

-

Forecaster­s warned a wave of dangerous storms in the United States could march through parts of the South, after storms a day earlier spawned damaging tornadoes and massive hail, leaving two dead in Tennessee and one dead in North Carolina.

The storms continue an outbreak of torrential rain and tornadoes that has cut across the country this week, from the Plains to the Midwest and now the southeaste­rn United States. At least four people have died in storms since Monday.

Amid Wednesday’s storms, the National Weather Service continued issuing tornado warnings that stretch past midnight in North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Kentucky. Parts of Arkansas and Mississipp­i were also under a tornado watch through the pre-dawn hours.

One storm that rumbled across northeaste­rn Tennessee on Wednesday brought high winds that knocked down power lines and trees. Bob Brooks, the sheriff in Claiborne County about an hour north of Knoxville, said a 22-year-old man was in a car when he was fatally struck by one of the trees.

A second person was killed in the city of Columbia in Maury County, where the National Weather Service said a likely tornado had touched down. Columbia is just south of Nashville.

Homes were damaged and people injured, according to Lynn Thompson, assistant director of Maury County 911.

Thompson said that he could not provide any further details: “We’re getting overloaded right now.”

Rita Thompson, a spokespers­on for Maury Regional Health, said the hospital received five patients, including the person who died. Another was in serious condition and three had injuries that were not life-threatenin­g, she said.

The storms also prompted the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to issue a temporary ground stop at Nashville Internatio­nal Airport and the National Weather Service to issue a tornado emergency – its highest alert level – for other nearby areas south of the state’s capital, including Chapel Hill and Eagleville.

Meanwhile, torrential rain and thundersto­rms led to water rescues northeast of Nashville.

“Do not attempt to travel unless you are fleeing an area subject to flooding or under an evacuation order,” the National Weather Service warned when it issued a flash flood emergency.

In North Carolina, a state of emergency was declared Wednesday night for Gaston County, west of Charlotte, following a large storm that toppled power lines and severed trees, killing one in a car.

 ?? ?? Disaster strikes: a mobile home destroyed by a tornado that severely damaged and destroyed several homes is pictured at Pavilion Estates in Kalamazoo, Michigan. — reuters
Disaster strikes: a mobile home destroyed by a tornado that severely damaged and destroyed several homes is pictured at Pavilion Estates in Kalamazoo, Michigan. — reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia