A deadly, mile-wide tornado ravages a suburb of Oklahoma City,
killing up to 91 people including many children. One of the strongest tornadoes ever
recorded has ripped through a suburb of Oklahoma City, killing as many as 91
people and destroying everything in its path.
Around half of those killed by ferocious winds of up to 200mph
in the southern suburb of Moore are thought to be children, with one
elementary school being directly hit. Entire neighbourhoods were flattened, rendering thousands of
people homeless and leaving buildings on fire. And as rescue workers continued to search for survivors,
forecasters warned of more severe weather in region.
Weather Channel meteorologist Kevin Roth said the east and south
of Oklahoma City were the areas most at risk, with other parts of 'tornado
alley' also threatened.
Roughly 500 students attend the school. It is unclear whether
any had been evacuated before the twister hit, but local media reported some
children were taken to a nearby church. Firefighters were at the scene digging through the debris to
reach any pupils possibly trapped inside.
A second elementary school, Briarwood, was also hit but did not
appear to have sustained casualties, while Moore's hospital complex was also
badly damaged.
Emergency crews pledged to work through the night across the
city to look for survivors, amid reports that another, smaller, storm was on
its way to the town of 55,000 people. The Oklahoma Medical Examiner's Office confirmed 51 deaths -
saying at least 20 children were among the fatalities.
But Amy Elliott, chief administrative officer for the state
medical examiner, said they had been told by emergency services to expect
another 40 bodies that had been retrieved from the rubble, bringing the total
to 91.
Officials at two hospitals said they were treating more than 140 patients, including around 70 children. Dozens of people were said to be in a critical condition.
President Barack Obama - who was due to deliver a statement at
3pm UK time (11am EDT) spoke to Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin on the phone and
promised the state all the help it needs as he declared the devastating tornado
a major disaster.
Ms Fallin told a news conference "hearts are broken"
for the parents looking for their children.
"This is a very sad day for the state of Oklahoma - a very
hard day and very tragic day," she said.
"Our prayers and our thoughts are with all the Oklahoma
families that have been hit hard by this terrible storm. We are doing
every single thing that we can to assist those that are in need right
now."
She said communication was hard with power lines and mobile
phone towers hit by the storm.
The governor said she had deployed 80 Oklahoma National Guard members to
help with the recovery effort and assist search and rescue teams who she said
were "looking under every single piece of debris" to find anyone that
might be injured or lost.
She had already declared a state of emergency for 16 Oklahoma
counties due to the tornado threat on Sunday, and added five more on Monday
after the storms hit the state capital.
Eric Olsen, a radio journalist, said parts of Moore resembled a
war zone.
"The devastation here is absolutely mind-blowing. It looks
like a bomb has absolutely levelled it. It looks like something you would see
in maybe Afghanistan or Iraq."
The National Weather Service gave the twister a preliminary EF-4
classification - on a five-point scale - with winds up to 200mph.
Weather service meteorologist Kelsey Angle said fewer than 1% of
all tornadoes ever reach EF-4 or EF-5 levels.
Several other tornado warnings were also in effect following the
devastating twister.
It came just a day after two people were confirmed killed
by a tornado nearby.
Residents of Moore had been urged to take shelter as the broad,
dark funnel cloud moved through the area for around 35 minutes before
dissipating.
KFOR-TV's news helicopter showed huge swathes of buildings and
homes completely levelled, with nothing but wreckage left. Some homes were
taken down to their concrete slabs.
Footage of the storm showed the monster twister slowly moving
through the area and the flashes of power lines blowing.
In Tulsa - 100 miles away - residents reported the debris from
the Moore tornado raining down on their neighbourhoods.
The huge tornado was the most recent in a series of twisters
that have ravaged towns in the midwest US in recent days, with a line of violent
storms that have stretched from the Canadian border down into Texas.
The stretch of the country is known as "tornado alley"
and residents are trained in how to take shelter. Most towns and cities
are equipped with storm sirens that can warn of a coming tornado half an hour
before it hits.
The same suburb was hit hard by a tornado in 1999, when the
storm produced the highest winds ever recorded near the Earth's surface - of up
to 302mph.
The Queen said she was "deeply saddened" by the loss
of life and devastation caused by the tornado and sent her
"deepest sympathies" to all those affected.
No comments:
Post a Comment