Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Whole neighbourhoods razed by Oklahoma tornado that killed 24
By Carey Gillam and Ian Simpson
MOORE, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Rescuers went building to building
in search of victims and survivors picked through the rubble of their
shattered homes on Tuesday, a day after a massive tornado tore through
the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, wiping out blocks of houses and
killing at least 24 people.
After
a long day of searching - emergency crews lifted broken doors, moved
sections of shattered walls and tossed aside bricks looking for
survivors as cadaver dogs sniffed through the rubble - Moore Mayor Glenn
Lewis said he believed all the dead and missing had been accounted for.
"We've
checked the area with thermal imagers, as well as gone door to door, so
we feel like we're fixing to go from rescue and searching to recovery,"
Lewis told CNN.
The death toll of 24 was lower than initially
feared, but nine children were among the dead, including seven who died
at Plaza Towers Elementary School, which took a direct hit on Monday in
the deadliest tornado to strike the United States in two years. About
240 people were injured.
Emergency workers pulled more than 100
survivors from the debris of homes, schools and a hospital after the
tornado ripped through the Oklahoma City region with winds exceeding 200
miles per hour (320 kph), leaving a trail of destruction 17 miles (23
km) long by 1.3 miles (2 km) wide.
"Can you imagine a lion, like a
huge lion? You mix it with a freight train and that's what it was like.
Scariest thing I've ever heard in my life," said Kim Limke, 40, in
Oklahoma City's Westmoor subdivision. "It was like a freight train came
out of a lion's mouth."
Limke rode out the tornado at her
daughter's school and was surrounded by its destruction on Tuesday at
her rented Westmoor home. For blocks around, houses were reduced to
heaps of rubble and trees were stripped of their leaves. The air was
tinged with the smell of wet pine from wrecked homes.
The
National Weather Service upgraded its calculation of the storm's
strength on Tuesday, saying it was a rare EF5, the most powerful ranking
on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, with winds exceeding 200 miles per hour
(320 kph).
'A LOT OF CHAOS'
In the hours right after the
storm, many more people had been feared dead. At one point, the Oklahoma
state medical examiner's office said the toll could rise as high as 91,
but on Tuesday officials said 24 bodies had been recovered, down from a
previous tally of 51.
The earlier numbers likely reflected some
double-counted deaths, said Amy Elliott, chief administrative officer
for the medical examiner.
"There was a lot of chaos," she said.
Shelters
were opened for families who lost their homes, and universities offered
to house people. Albert Ashwood, director of Oklahoma's department of
emergency management, said it was too early to say how many people were
left homeless, but clearly it was thousands, given the extent of the
damage.
The National Guard, fire-fighters from more than a dozen
fire departments and rescuers from other states were involved in the
search-and-rescue effort in Moore, a town of 55,000 people. Washington
deployed 300 federal disaster workers to Oklahoma.
Plaza Towers
Elementary School was one of five schools in the path of the tornado.
"They literally were lifting walls up and kids were coming out,"
Oklahoma State Police Sergeant Jeremy Lewis said. "They pulled kids out
from under cinder blocks without a scratch on them."
Oklahoma
Insurance Commissioner John Doak said the damage to property was likely
to exceed that caused by the 2011 twister in Joplin, Missouri, which
killed 161 people. Insured losses from the Joplin tornado exceeded $2
billion (1 billion pounds) and are expected to rise as claims are
settled.
Disaster modelling company AIR Worldwide estimated the
replacement value of the properties within a mile of each side of the
tornado's track at around $6 billion. The figure represents a rough
estimate of the potential upper limit of losses, not an actual loss
estimate, it said.
'AS LONG AS IT TAKES'
President Barack Obama declared a major disaster in Oklahoma, ordering federal aid to supplement state and local efforts.
"The
people of Moore should know that their country will remain on the
ground, there for them, beside them, as long as it takes," Obama said at
the White House.
Lewis, the Moore mayor, warned residents of the
danger of electrocution and fire from downed power lines and broken
natural gas lines. Thunderstorms and lightning slowed the search effort
and made conditions tough for families left with nothing but their
clothes.
At Moore's Eastwood Estates, Nicole Moore, 32, and her
husband, Kelly Regouby, 43, picked through the wreckage of what had been
the master bedroom of their home.
During the storm, the couple,
their 9-month-old son, Regouby's 20-year-old daughter and Moore's mother
huddled in a shelter built into the floor of their garage. The house
came down over them, but they emerged with only scratches.
On Tuesday, they recovered rain-soaked family pictures and mementos.
"As
long as we find stuff like this, I'll be happy," Moore said, her voice
breaking. "We'd give up 10 of these houses to have our family safe."
In
the neighbourhood, brick walls were flattened and pink insulation was
scattered everywhere. Hundreds of cars looked as if they had been
shelled. In a sign of the tornado's strength, a bicycle wheel found in a
sodden field had lost its rim and the spokes were wrapped around the
hub.
Authorities warned the town 16 minutes before the tornado
touched down just after 3 p.m. That amount of time is more than the
average eight to 10 minutes of warning.
FIVE SCHOOLS HIT
U.S. Representative Tom Cole, who lives in Moore, said the Plaza Towers school was the most secure building in the area.
"And
so people did the right thing, but if you're in front of an F4 or an F5
(in tornado strength), there is no good thing to do if you're above
ground. It's just tragic," he said on MSNBC-TV.
Miguel Macias and
his wife, Veronica, had two children at the Plaza Towers school. They
found 8-year-old Ruby after workers rescued the girl but their son,
6-year-old Angel, was nowhere to be found, said Brenda Ramon, pastor of
the Faith Latino Church where the family are members.
Ramon and
several congregation members spent hours helping the family search for
Angel. He was located at a medical centre in Oklahoma City about five
hours after the tornado hit.
"It was heart-breaking," Ramon said.
"We couldn't find him for hours." The boy had wounds to his face and
head, but was not badly hurt, Ramon said. "Their little bodies are so
resilient," he said.
Witnesses said Monday's tornado appeared
more fierce than a giant twister that was among the dozens that tore up
the area on May 3, 1999, killing more than 40 people and destroying
thousands of homes. That tornado ranked as an EF5.
The 1999
tornado ranks as the third-costliest in U.S. history, having caused more
than $1 billion in damage at the time, or more than $1.3 billion in
today's dollars. Only the devastating Joplin and Tuscaloosa tornadoes in
2011 were more costly. (Graphic http://link.reuters.com/gec38t)
(Additional
reporting by Alice Mannette, Lindsay Morris, Nick Carey, Brendan
O'Brien and Greg McCune; Writing by Claudia Parsons and Jim Loney;
Editing by Grant McCool, Philip Barbara and Stacey Joyce)
TheStar online Wednesday 22 May 2013.
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