Monday 23 May 2011

US tornado toll climbs to 116

 
JOPLIN: US states braced for more storms Monday after a tornado in Missouri killed 116 people, putting it on course to be the deadliest single twister to strike the United States in modern history.

Forecasters warned more potent storms were on the way in the area around Joplin, Missouri where the massive twister struck Sunday leading to 116 deaths, matching the deadliest tornado in modern US records.

"We are currently forecasting a major severe weather outbreak for Tuesday over the central United States with strong tornadoes likely over Oklahoma, Kansas, extreme northern Texas, southwest Missouri," said Russell Schneider, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Storm Prediction Center.

Officials warned the death toll in Missouri was sure to rise after Sunday's massive twister cut a swath of destruction four miles (6.4 kilometers) long and three quarters of a mile (more than a kilometer) wide.

"There are going to be some things out there that are going to be hard to see and stomach," Missouri Governor Jay Nixon said as he asked people to pray for those affected and those searching the wreckage.

"We remain positive and optimistic that there are lives out there to be saved.
"We're going to go through every foot of this town and make sure that every person is accounted for," Nixon told reporters.

Officials said the last single twister to wreak such loss of life occurred on June 8, 1953 when 116 people were killed in Flint, Michigan.

Some 1,150 wounded people were treated in area hospitals after Sunday's twister, The Joplin Globe reported.

Flames and smoke from broken gas lines shot up through the wreckage as block after block of homes and businesses were reduced to rubble and cars were tossed so violently into the air that they turned into crumpled heaps of metal.

Heavy rain, lightening and strong winds hampered relief efforts while hundreds of exhausted rescue workers carefully picked their way through the rubble with the help of sniffer dogs.

Disaster struck on Sunday evening when, with just 24 minutes warning, the monster twister packing winds of up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour tore through the center of town. (AFP)

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