https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1560294178286206911#editor/target=post;postID=1270428828756018747
Source: REUTERS
Eight people died
in the greater Dallas area as a storm system brought tornadoes and
flooding on Saturday, increasing the death toll from harsh weather in
the southern United States this week to 26, according to officials and
local media.
Authorities in
Garland confirmed that five people died after a tornado struck the city,
some 15 miles (24 km) northeast of downtown Dallas. Homes, apartments
and vehicles were also damaged, police said, but it was not clear how
many people were hurt.
The five
deaths were believed to have been related to vehicles having been struck
by a tornado near State Highway 190 and Interstate 30.
Two
other people were found dead at a gas station in the city of Copeville,
another 20 miles (32 km) to the northeast, said Lt. Chris Havey,
spokesman for the Collin County Sheriff’s Office, and an infant had died
in Blue Ridge.
The National
Weather Service confirmed tornadoes hit multiple cities in the greater
Dallas area on Saturday evening, and there were reports of widespread
damage and flooding.
NWS
meteorologist Steve Fano said roughly eight tornadoes may have touched
down across seven counties, though preliminary reports could not be
confirmed.
The Weather Service said
at least one tornado struck south of Dallas in Ellis County, where
Emergency Management Coordinator Stephanie Parker said: "We have
destroyed and damaged homes."
Weather officials
also confirmed tornadoes hitting the towns of Ovilla, Farmersville and
Rowlett. Images uploaded to social media showed a massive tornado near
Rowlett, as well as devastated houses and vehicles.
The
Weather Service said there were reports of debris falling from the sky
onto a highway in nearby DeSoto. Fano said that while the tornado threat
had dissipated for the region, flash flood watches would extend through
the night.
Power was out for some 30,000 customers in the region as of Saturday night, according to energy company Oncor.
MORE BODIES IN MISSISSIPPI
Officials
in Benton County, Mississippi, on Saturday found the bodies of a man
and woman who were missing since being caught in a tornado on Wednesday,
said Greg Flynn, spokesman for Mississippi Emergency Management Agency.
The cause of their deaths was
not disclosed, but they brought the total dead from tornadoes in
Mississippi to 10, in addition to 56 people injured, officials said.
The
tornado damaged 403 homes over a seven-county area in the state, Flynn
said. In addition, flooding left 50 homes uninhabitable and closed 40
roads in Monroe County, which got 10 to 12 inches (about 25 to 30 cm) of
rain, he said.
The tornadoes also killed six people in Tennessee and one each in Arkansas and Alabama, bringing the three-state total to 18.
State
authorities told local broadcaster WTVY that they had recovered the
body of a 5-year-old boy who drowned when the car he was in was swept
into floodwaters on Friday. A 22-year-old man who was in the car remains
missing, the station said.
U.S.
post-holiday travelers can expect a mix of stormy weather during the
remainder of the weekend, with blizzard conditions in New Mexico and
western Texas and flooding rain in the southern plains from south Texas
through Indiana, forecasters said.
In
California, high winds fanned a wildfire that closed parts of the
much-traveled U.S. Highway 101 northwest of Los Angeles and forced
evacuations, fire officials said.
The
wet and snowy conditions come after a Christmas Day of unseasonable
warmth on the East Coast, with record-high temperatures set or tied in
several cities, including New York.
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