Death toll at 37 after tornadoes rage across US

Dunya News

The death toll reached 37 in tornadoes that hit eight states in the US Midwest and South.

Rescuers and residents searched house to house Saturday a day after tornadoes killed at least 37 people and injured hundreds, tearing across the US heartland and virtually wiping out communities.Even as stunned Americans grappled with the magnitude of the destruction brought by Fridays twisters, the National Weather Service (NWS) issued new tornado warnings for parts of Georgia and Florida, in the countrys southeast.Trucks and trees were upended as deadly funnel clouds ravaged parts of eight states in the US Midwest and South.The devastating images included a school bus smashed through the wall of a house, trucks thrown into lakes, solid brick homes reduced to rubble and wooden ones smashed into kindling, as well as mobile homes flipped like tin cans.President Barack Obama called the governors of Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio to offer condolences for the dead and said the federal emergency management agency stood ready to help, the White House said.Deaths were reported in Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Alabama and Georgia as the storm system moved eastward.In Kentucky, where Governor Steve Beshears office confirmed 18 fatalities, a total of 13 tornadoes roared across the state, causing damage in 40 counties and knocking out power to 22,000 people.At least 14 people were killed in Indiana, according to Governor Mitch Daniels, who inspected the devastation in Henryville.The hardest hit was Marysville, where the small town has nearly ceased to exist, officials said. Thats the information we have, that Marysville is no longer, US Senator Dan Coats of Indiana told CNN.Indiana activated 250 members of its National Guard, who used Black Hawk helicopters to reach hard-hit regions. Indiana and Kentucky declared states of emergency.There were three deaths in neighboring Ohio, including a city councilwoman from the town of Moscow, an Emergency Management Agency official said.The Gulf Coast state of Alabama reported one death after tornadoes trapped people in rubble, destroyed houses and uprooted trees.In Georgia, a woman was killed in the city of Alpharetta, north of Atlanta, and tornadoes inflicted severe damage on at least 40 homes and a regional airport west of the city in Paulding County, a spokeswoman for the states emergency management agency said.The latest wave of storms comes as people were picking through rubble left behind by a string of twisters across six states that killed 13 people earlier in the week.The NWS received 83 reports of tornadoes in eight states by Friday evening, bringing the weeks total to 133.More could be on their way as a particularly dangerous tornado watch continued into Saturday in four states in a massive storm that also carried golf-ball sized hail.Some 545 people were killed by tornadoes in 2011, the deadliest season since 1936 and the third worst on record.This year tornadoes have come early with the mild winter creating the conditions for cold fronts to slam into warmer air.