Bangkok Post

Texas toll mounts as Harvey moves further east

New Orleans spared further heartbreak

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HOUSTON: Storm-battered Houston began limping towards recovery yesterday as Harvey’s floodwater­s started receding there, though the historic storm was still wreaking havoc further east.

While clouds parted at last in America’s fourth-largest city, rural areas of Texas were drenched as Harvey headed eastwards, with the city of Port Arthur especially hard hit.

Authoritie­s in Louisiana scrambled to safeguard their state from Harvey, whose onslaught evoked painful memories of Hurricane Katrina’s deadly strike 12 years ago — but New Orleans escaped with minimal rain.

In Houston rescuers had recovered bodies of six family members from a van swept away by floods over the weekend.

“Our worst fears have been realized,” Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez told journalist­s, confirming the bodies of Manuel and Belia Saldivar and four of their great-grandchild­ren had been discovered.

Officials believe at least 33 people have been killed in the storm. There is little doubt the toll will rise further — although many of those unaccounte­d for may simply have no phone or power access.

More than 30,000 people have found refuge in shelters across the Lone Star State, from the giant Houston convention centre to small churches, according to Brock Long, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

In Houston, where Mayor Sylvester Turner issued an nighttime curfew to aid search efforts and thwart potential looting, the two major airports reopened on a limited basis, signalling a slow return to normality.

Mr Turner told journalist­s trash pickup and metro service will resume in some areas where flood waters have receded.

“It’s my hope that despite how massive this storm has been, that the city of Houston will quickly move to get back to where we were and then beyond that,” Mr Turner said.

The National Hurricane Center downgraded Harvey to a tropical depression on Wednesday night, but warned life-threatenin­g flood conditions remain in southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana.

At least a quarter of Harris County, which includes Houston, is still under water — and the operators of an organic peroxides plant outside the city warned they were bracing for the risk of an explosion after flooding caused them to lose all power.

“Right now, we have an unpreceden­ted six feet of water at the plant,” Rich Rowe, president and chief executive of plant operator Arkema Inc, said in a statement.

“We have lost critical refrigerat­ion of the materials on site that could now explode and cause a subsequent intense fire,” he said. “The high water and lack of power leave us with no way to prevent it.”

Officials had already ordered the evacuation of an area within 2.4km of the plant in Crosby, northeast of Houston, and Mr Rowe said the facility itself had been evacuated for employees’ safety.

Even as Houston got a first glimpse of life-after-Harvey, the city of Port Arthur was pummelled by torrential rains, making it almost impossible to reach despite the best efforts of volunteer rescuers.

Justin Coleman was part of a crew of jeeps and boats that drove overnight from Fort Worth trying to reach Port Arthur, but were forced to turn around on their first attempt.

“There’s a lot of babies and elderly that are stuck in their homes right now. They said it’s getting up to their chests,” the 33-year-old said during a gas station stop in the nearby town Winnie.

So far, parts of Texas have seen more than 50 inches (1.27 meters) of rain, while in Louisiana, the top total 18 inches so far was increasing.

Harvey first slammed onshore as a Category 4 hurricane last Friday night before unloading on Texas.

As a tropical storm it then made its second landfall just west of the Louisiana town of Cameron early on Wednesday, packing maximum sustained winds nearing 75kph.

For now, southweste­rn Louisiana is taking the hardest hit, with a levee being breached in the town of Gueydan.

While New Orleans appeared to have dodged a bullet, the arrival of Harvey neverthele­ss served as a sombre reminder, coming just one day after the 12-year anniversar­y of Katrina, which ravaged the city famous for its jazz music and cuisine.

“I began to pray for the people in Texas after having gone through that same experience myself as a Katrina survivor,” said Crystal Harris.

In Texas, the damage wrought is staggering. Enki Research put its “best estimate” at between $48 billion and $75 billion.

More than 4,500 people and 1,000 pets have been rescued from the storm zone by the coastguard.

The coastguard has deployed about 50 aircraft and two dozen boats, but the overall rescue effort, involving other military branches and state police, easily tops more than 100 aircraft.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman is rescued from floodwater­s in Lakeside Estate in Houston on Wednesday as Texas continued to feel the effects of monster storm Harvey.
AFP A woman is rescued from floodwater­s in Lakeside Estate in Houston on Wednesday as Texas continued to feel the effects of monster storm Harvey.

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