WASHINGTON: A tornado tore off roofs, smashed cars, and flattened neighbourhoods in Mississippi, killing at least 23 people.
Late Friday, a severe storm system with thunderstorms and heavy rain ravaged Mississippi, destroying numerous villages.
The state’s emergency management office reported Saturday four people missing, scores injured, and tens of thousands across Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee were without electricity.
A row of houses and structures in Rolling Fork, a town of 2,000, razed. Television video showed cars overturned, fences torn, and trees uprooted.
“Most everything has swept away,” town hardware shop employee Patricia Perkins told AFP.
While, Shanta Howard told local News how residents helped retrieve the dead from the ruins.
Sharkey County, home to Rolling Fork, 70 miles northwest of Jackson, and neighbouring counties were conducting search and rescue operations.
Moreover, 23 deaths might climb, officials said.
“These towns will feel the loss forever,” state Governor Tate Reeves tweeted. “Please pray for God’s hand over everyone who lost family and friends.”
While, President Joseph Biden called the Mississippi photographs “heartbreaking” and pledged federal aid.
“We’ll help. We’ll stay until it’s done “he stated.
Continuous Cry
Storm chaser Aaron Rigsby told AFP he arrived in Rolling Fork in the torrential rain with “lightning still all around” following the storm.
“When I got there, just a nonstop clamour of voices asking for help from trapped people,” he claimed.
Moreover, At 9:00 pm Friday, the National Weather Service issued a rare tornado emergency for Rolling Fork and neighbouring communities, warning residents to seek shelter from life-threatening conditions and golf ball-sized hail.
Meteorologists say the tornado watch ended early Saturday. Thunderstorms projected, but not severe.
The Morgan County sheriff’s office tweeted that a caravan toppled in inclement weather in Alabama killed a guy.
The NWS warned that “dangers remain long after the storms move on” during clean-up.
Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Malary White said officials would properly examine the damage Saturday.
“Life safety and accounting for the individuals and making sure they are safe,” she told CBS News affiliate WJTV.
“My city is gone,” Rolling Fork Mayor Eldridge Walker told CNN. “Devastation—all that’s I see.
“Many families suffer. Our community’s position is unexpected.
“We can rebuild houses but not lives.”
Throughout the middle and southern United States, tornadoes, which are famously hard to predict, are prevalent.
A day of destructive twisters in Alabama and Georgia killed seven people in January.