From the BBC:
“Hurricane Laura death toll
climbs to 14 in the US”
Fourteen people are now confirmed
dead in the United States after Hurricane Laura battered southern states. Ten
of the victims were in Louisiana and four in Texas. Winds of up to 150mph
(240km/h) caused severe damage, with power cuts to more than half a million
homes and a chemical fire from an industrial plant. Louisiana Governor John Bel
Edwards has asked the federal government for immediate financial assistance in
dealing with the fallout. President Donald Trump will travel to the two states
on Saturday to meet with people affected by the hurricane, the White House
said. Laura has now been downgraded to tropical storm status, but heavy rain is
still falling on several states. In Haiti, which was earlier badly hit by
storms Marco and Laura, at least 31 people are now reported to have died.
What's the latest in the US? Mr
Edwards said he has asked President Trump to declare a federal disaster for 23
parishes in Louisiana. "Hurricane Laura is the fifth strongest
storm to make landfall in the United States in recorded history and the first
in memory to maintain major hurricane strength as it travelled through
Louisiana, bringing catastrophic destruction to many parishes," Mr Edwards
said in a statement. Speaking at a press conference, he called Laura
"the strongest storm to ever hit Louisiana". Of the 10 people
to lose their lives in the state, five died from carbon monoxide poisoning from
gas-powered emergency generators, four from trees falling and one who drowned.
In Texas, a man was killed when a tree hit his home, and three people lost
their lives in Port Arthur, possibly from carbon monoxide poisoning, officials
reported. Around 8,000 homes were possibly destroyed in the two states,
according to the Red Cross. Nic Hunter, mayor of one of the hardest hit
areas - Lake Charles in Louisiana - said it was unclear when electricity and
water supplies would be restored. "If you come back to Lake Charles
to stay, make sure you understand the above reality and are prepared to live in
it for many days, probably weeks," he wrote on Facebook. There was
more structural damage from winds than anticipated, but the water damage was
less than feared. Some 1,500 people, including National Guard troops,
are being deployed in rescue and clean-up missions.
What other areas have
suffered? The death toll in Haiti has risen by 10 to 31 and eight people
are missing, the country's civil protection service said. More than 6,000 homes
were flooded in the country. Four people are known to have died in
neighbouring Dominican Republic. Cuba suffered damage but did not record
any deaths. In Jamaica, there were reports of landslides and flooded
roads. The US territory of Puerto Rico was also hit, with President
Trump declaring a state of disaster last Saturday.
^ While there was damage and
death from this Hurricane it seems it didn’t live up to all the media hype
(luckily.) ^
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