logo
US tornadoes, wildfires and dust storms leave 40 dead and 'staggering' damage

US tornadoes, wildfires and dust storms leave 40 dead and 'staggering' damage

Saudi Gazette17-03-2025
WASHINGTON — At least 40 people have died after tornadoes ripped through a swathe of the US Midwest and South.
Missouri bore the brunt of the twisters, which began to spawn on Friday. At least 12 people have died in that state.
Powerful winds in Texas and Kansas whipped up dust storms that resulted in vehicle pile-ups and a dozen deaths.
The extreme weather, covering an area of the country that is home to more than 100 million people, fanned nearly 150 deadly wildfires in Oklahoma. Fatalities were also recorded in Arkansas, Alabama and Mississippi.
Parts of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia, Kentucky and North Carolina were under flood advisories.
More than 320,000 people across the region were without power on Sunday evening, according to tracker PowerOutageUS.
States of emergency have been declared in Arkansas, Georgia and Oklahoma.
In Missouri, Governor Mike Kehoe said "the scale of devastation across our state is staggering".
"Hundreds of homes, schools, and businesses have been either destroyed or severely damaged," his statement added.
A tornado killed the occupant of one residence in Butler County in the Midwestern state, leaving it "unrecognisable as a home", according to local coroner Jim Akers.
"Just a debris field," he added. "The floor was upside down. We were walking on walls."
In Oklahoma, nearly 150 wildfires driven by winds that hit 83mph (133km/h) toppled several articulated lorries.
The state's chief medical examiner said at least four people had died there as a result of fires or high winds.
The blazes burnt 170,000 acres and destroyed nearly 300 structures, including a farmhouse owned by the state's Governor Kevin Stitt.
In Kansas, at least eight people died after more than 55 vehicles crashed due to a dust storm.
In Texas, another dust storm caused a pile-up of about 38 cars, leaving at least four people dead.
Six people died in Mississippi as tornadoes swept through that state and twisters killed another three in Alabama, including an 82-year-old woman.
In Arkansas, officials reported three deaths and 29 people injured.
US President Donald Trump said the National Guard had been deployed to Arkansas to help with the storm response.
"Please join Melania and me in praying for everyone impacted by these terrible storms!" he posted on his Truth social platform. — BBC
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dozens feared trapped as cloudburst triggers flash floods in India
Dozens feared trapped as cloudburst triggers flash floods in India

Saudi Gazette

time7 hours ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Dozens feared trapped as cloudburst triggers flash floods in India

DELHI — Rescuers are looking for dozens of people who are feared trapped after a massive cloudburst triggered heavy rains and flash floods in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand. Teams, including army and paramilitaries, have reached Dharali village in Uttarkashi district, which is believed to have borne the brunt of the floods. Dramatic videos of the disaster show a giant wave of water gushing through the area, crumpling buildings in its path. A tourist spot, Dharali is populated with hotels, resorts and restaurants. A cloudburst is an extreme, sudden downpour of rain over a small area in a short period of time, often leading to flash floods. It took place at around 13:30 India time [08:00 GMT] when a large amount of water came down, swelling the Kheerganga river and sending tonnes of muddy waters gushing downwards on the hilly terrain, covering roads, buildings and shops in Dharali. Eyewitnesses from a nearby village who shot the dramatic footage of the muddy water coursing through the streets could be heard shrieking, blowing whistles and shouting "run, run", but said the sudden surge did not give people any chance to run said they believed many people to be trapped under the ancient Kalpkedar temple is also covered under the slush and is believe to have been damaged, they Minister Narendra Modi has offered his "condolences to the people affected by the tragedy" in a post on X."I pray for the well-being of all the victims... Relief and rescue teams are engaged in every possible effort. No stone is being left unturned in providing assistance to the people," he Prashant Arya, the senior-most official of Uttarkashi, said communication had been erratic because of poor connectivity in the area."As it's a populated area with lots of restaurants and hotels, we've dispatched rescue teams to the site," he is located 2km from Harsil which is a popular tourist destination and also has a huge Indian army base. A camp of the paramilitary Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) is also located near the from the two forces have reached the site of the disaster and officials said they were doing an assessment of the rescue is expected to be slow because the area is continuing to receive heavy of the injured are receiving treatment at the army camp in Harsil, reports said.— BBC

More than 30 killed in nursing home hit by Beijing floods
More than 30 killed in nursing home hit by Beijing floods

Saudi Gazette

time5 days ago

  • Saudi Gazette

More than 30 killed in nursing home hit by Beijing floods

BEIJING — Flooding killed 31 residents at a care home for elderly people on the outskirts of Beijing this week, local officials have said. Footage showed emergency teams wading through chest-high water trying to rescue those trapped in the home in the Miyun District. Many of those who died were reportedly immobile. Local officials have admitted there were "loopholes in emergency planning" and said the incident was a painful lesson that served as "a wake-up call". A total of 44 people have died in the Beijing floods, which have come during a summer of extreme weather across China. Record heatwaves hit the eastern regions earlier this month while separate floods swept the country's south-west. About 77 elderly residents were inside the home when the floods hit, trapping about 40 of them as water levels rose to almost 2m (6ft), according to Chinese media. The facility - situated in Taishitun Town - primarily cares for those who are severely disabled, low-income, or receiving minimal living allowances, local media reports."For a long time, the central area of the town where the nursing home is located had been considered safe, so it was not included in the evacuation scope of the plan," a Chinese official said at a press conference on Thursday."This reveals that there are loopholes in our emergency planning. Our understanding of extreme weather has been insufficient, and this painful lesson has served as a wake-up call."In nearby Hebei province, 16 people died as a result of extreme rainfall, officials said. In the city of Chengde, eight were killed, with 18 still unaccounted is no stranger to flooding, particularly in the summer months. One of the deadliest in recent memory occurred in July 2012, when 190mm of rain drenched the city in a day, killing 79 summer, floods have wreaked havoc across swathes of people were killed and 10 people went missing in Shandong province earlier this month when Typhoon Wipha struck eastern China. Two weeks earlier, a landslide killed three people in Ya'an city, in the country's weather, which experts link to climate change, has increasingly threatened China's residents and economy - especially its trillion-dollar agriculture disasters in the first half of the year have cost China 54.11 billion yuan ($7.5bn; £5.7bn), its emergency management ministry said earlier this month. Flooding accounted for more than 90% of the losses, it added. — BBC

Hawaiians cram roads away from coasts as tsunami waves arrive
Hawaiians cram roads away from coasts as tsunami waves arrive

Saudi Gazette

time6 days ago

  • Saudi Gazette

Hawaiians cram roads away from coasts as tsunami waves arrive

LOS ANGELES — Many Hawaiians have heeded official advice to leave coastal areas, after a powerful earthquake thousands of miles away near Russia caused tsunami waves to reach the US state and other parts of the Pacific. Waves several feet high were recorded on the islands of Maui, Oahu and Hawaii on Tuesday evening, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said, urging people to take "urgent action" to protect lives and property. The centre later downgraded its tsunami warning for Hawaii to a tsunami advisory, though cautioned that flooding was still possible. Governor Josh Green struck a hopeful tone, saying he had yet to see a "wave of consequence" in the state. He had earlier advised people in low-lying areas to move to higher ground, and noted that that roads were getting busy as people evacuated their homes. Other areas of the US west coast - including California and Alaska - made their own preparations while under a lesser tsunami advisory from the National Tsunami Warning Center (NTWC).Follow live updates on the tsunamiAn NTWC warning means that widespread flooding is expected or occurring, while an advisory indicates that there is a potential for strong currents or waves that could be Dr Lucy Jones anticipated that the waves could damage harbours and waterfront properties in Hawaii - and possibly in California - but would not cause a catastrophic loss of life in the tallest waves could be several feet high in Hawaii, Dr Jones noted, but by comparison, they reached 42ft (13m) during a deadly tsunami in Japan in Hawaiians have taken no on Maui, which was devastated by wildfires two years ago, were among those who moved to higher ground while the warning was in Dorn told the BBC that he was no stranger to tsunami warnings, having lived a block away from the ocean in the coastal city of Kihei, on Maui, for 30 years. But he and his wife were treating this one differently."We try and take them all seriously, but most people kind of take them a bit lightly," he said of the warning sirens that had been blaring since the first alert was and his wife had evacuated to higher ground and were planning to spend the night in their van at an inland shopping Dorn said that before leaving their home, he had moved his electronics up to their loft, hoping that even if seawater penetrates the building it would not reach the biggest concern was the traffic, especially if electrical poles fell and blocked roads."Traffic's always a problem, and its getting worse. And it's at its worst in any emergency like this," he Maui resident, Roger Pleasanton, told the BBC that the traffic was "like New York City right now"."I was going to go to the grocery store, but I think I may have to skip the groceries and get out of here," he Maui prepared for the arrival of the waves, shelters were opened and water facilities were shut off to protect them from possible had been 10 years since Felicia Johnson, a lifelong resident of the island, last fled from a tsunami. Late on Tuesday, she again found herself moving to higher Johnson, 47, had watched the water level recede and then rise significantly - describing a pattern typically seen with tsunamis."It's eerily weird," she exclaimed, while packing her truck to spend a night with her family and friends in the compared the situation to the fire that hit Lahaina two years ago, devastating the island and its community."All I can do is leave the house. I'm leaving, so I'm definitely worried something's coming. But I mean, what can you cry about?"We went through this with the fires, and there was no warning, and it was just so devastating. Now, we have so much warning that if we don't go it's our fault."Waves reaching 5.7ft (1.74m) have been recorded at Kahului, Maui, and one of 4.9ft was recorded in Hilo, management authorities warned people to remain outside the coastal evacuation zone until the all-clear was California, the first waves were comparatively small. The first measurements from the National Tsunami Warning Center show a wave of 1.6ft hitting Arena Cove, north of San Monterey to the south, a height of 1.4ft was National Weather Service (NWS) warned of potentially higher crests near Port San Luis, roughly halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles. People were being asked to avoid the Manhattan Beach in Los Angeles County, some were relaxed about the Mejia, 25, and his two cousins were packing up their longboards in their convertible when his mom called."She said, 'Did you see there was a huge earthquake and there's maybe gonna be a tsunami?' I was like, 'No, I've been in the water!'"Instead of speeding off, the trio sat in their car and peered out at the ocean, talking about heading back in and riding tsunami tsunami evacuation route signs line many roads along the US west Canada, wave heights have so far remained below 1ft. — BBC

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store