Monday, May 23, 2011

USA_America's deadliest single tornado in 60 years hits the town of Joplin, Missouri, destroying one third of town

America's deadliest single tornado in 60 years hits the town of Joplin, Missouri, destroying one third of town
UPDATED From: AFP May 24, 2011 7:03AM
THE AUSTRALIAN


Jean Logan reviews the damage to her home in Joplin, Missouri. Ms Logan and her granddaughter rode out the storm in the laundry. The twister cut a six-mile path through the city. Source: AP

RESCUE crews are clawing through rubble, searching for survivors in the wake of the deadliest single tornado to strike the United States in nearly 60 years.

The massive twister cut a swath of destruction 6.5km long and over a kilometre wide through the Missouri town of Joplin, killing at least 116 people.

''Three quarters of the town of 50,000 people was destroyed so it's going to go higher,'' Christy Bertelson, a spokeswoman for Missouri Governor Jay Nixon, told AFP.

Some 1150 wounded people were treated in area hospitals, the Joplin Globe reported.

The force of the tornado was such that road signs and X-rays from the local hospital were found as far as 110km away.

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 that they turned into crumpled heaps of metal.


A residential neighborhood in Joplin, Missouri, is seen the morning after it was leveled by a tornado that destroyed nearly 30 per cent of the town. Source: AP

"The number of folks that we've lost continues to rise," Governor Jay Nixon told CNN.

"But the bottom line is we still believe there are folks that are alive underneath the rubble and we're working hard to save them."

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

"It's been very difficult," Mr Nixon said. "You have to move through there very gingerly because you could cause something to fall."

Disaster struck on Sunday evening when, with little warning, the monster twister packing winds of up to 320km/h tore through the centre of town.

Rescuers worked through the night to try to find people trapped in their homes, relying on torchlights as they listened for terrified cries from survivors piercing through the blackness.

More than 2000 buildings - or about a third of the city of 50,000 near the border with Kansas and Oklahoma - were damaged or destroyed.

Jeff Law, 23, was able to take shelter in a storm cellar and was overwhelmed by what he saw when he emerged.

"I've lived in this neighborhood my entire life, and I didn't know where I was," Mr Law told the Springfield News-Leader. "Everything was unrecognisable, completely unrecognisable. It's like Armageddon."

Roger Dedick used a metal bar to pry himself out of his crushed home only to find one of his neighbours had been killed.

"That's all that's left," he told AFP as he pointed to the concrete foundation.

Caring for the injured was made more difficult because the main hospital, Saint John's Regional Medical Center, had to be evacuated after suffering a direct hit - the tornado ripped off its roof and smashed all its windows.

A tangled medical helicopter lay in the rubble of crushed cars, broken glass and medical records strewn outside the hospital.

Medical records from the hospital, including patient X-rays, were found up to 110km away.

"It's a war zone," said Scott Meeker of The Joplin Globe newspaper.

"We've got hundreds of wounded being treated at Memorial Hall (auditorium), but they were quickly overwhelmed and ran out of supplies, so they've opened up a local school as a triage centre."

Mr Nixon declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard to help out after one of the worst disasters in the state's history.

President Barack Obama sent his "deepest condolences" to victims and called Mr Nixon to assure him the federal government would provide whatever assistance was needed.

"We commend the heroic efforts by those who have responded and who are working to help their friends and neighbors at this very difficult time," the president said in a statement sent from Air Force One as he flew to Europe.

It was the deadliest of 73 tornadoes reported to the National Weather Service in nine central states on Saturday and Sunday and comes less than a month after a horrific tornado outbreak left 354 dead across seven US states.

"This is certainly one of the most devastating scenes I've ever seen," said Perry Elkins, a former army medic who was managing a shelter set up by the Red Cross.

Officials said the last single twister to wreak such loss of life occurred in 1953 in Worcester, Massachusetts, when a tornado killed 90 people.

On Saturday, a deadly tornado pummeled the east Kansas town of Reading, killing a man and damaging an estimated 80 per cent of Reading's structures, mostly wood-frame buildings.

Meanwhile, a tornado was also responsible for the death of one person in Minneapolis, Minnesota, authorities said. At least 30 others in that city and its suburbs were injured.

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