Posts Tagged ‘disaster

14
May
08

Oklahoma Tornado

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May 2008 Oklahoma Tornado

Survivors sifted through what little was left of their communities on Sunday after tornadoes tore across several states leaving a trail of death and destruction. Tornadoes caused at least 22 deaths in three states.

Picher, Oklahoma was particularly hard hit. The twister devastated a 20-square-block area. Picher was once a busling mining center that had a population of 20,000 that dwindled to over 800 as families fled due to lead pollution. Piles of mine waste, or chat, have long towered over the town across a highway from the devastated neighborhood; they’re now peppered with debris from homes flattened by the tornado.

Residents say the tornado created a surreal scene as it moved through Picher. Overturning cars and throwing house hold debris high into the canopy of trees. One survivor said she could barely recognize her own town.

“This is utterly devastating. This is just like a bomb dropped out of the sky and hit and just destroyed everything in its path,” Picher Police Lt. George Brown said.

The storm then moved into Missouri claiming more homes and lives across a mile-wide path of destruction. In many cases residents said they had no warning that tornadoes were approaching.

“It was clear, there weren’t any clouds, there wasn’t any rain. And we sat back down and was talking a little bit longer and It just kept getting louder. And it hit,” one witness said.

The twister killed 15 people in three southwest Missouri counties. Authorities say the death toll could rise.

More than three dozen tornadoes moved across the South and Midwest this weekend, in what has been the most volatile tornado season in decades. Twisters have claimed more lives so far this year than in all of 2007.

13
May
08

Myanmar Typhoon

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Photo from AP

The tropical cyclone that struck Myanmar at the weekend left thousands of people killed. The latest estimate is 22,500 dead and more than 40,000 still missing, according to some government officials. Rice fields littered with corpses, desperate survivors homeless and with nothing to eat or drink.

According to the United Nations, the disaster ravaged a huge swathe of southwestern Myanmar, affecting 24 million people or nearly half the country’s population.

Foreign Minister Nyan Win said his nation would welcome international aid.

Nyan Win welcomed Thailand’s promise to send emergency food and medicine, saying Myanmar would welcome international aid from other countries.

We will welcome help like this from other countries, because our people are in difficulty,” he said.

Few outsiders are allowed to work inside the reclusive country, and fewer still have been able to reach the swampy Irrawaddy river delta which was hardest-hit when cyclone Nargis slammed into the coast on Saturday.

Christian relief organisation World Vision, one of the few international agencies allowed to work inside the military-ruled state, said its teams had surveyed the worst-affected regions and witnessed scenes of desperation.

They saw the dead bodies from the helicopters, so it’s quite overwhelming from that height,” said Kyi Minn, an adviser to World Vision’s office in Myanmar’s main city of Yangon. “Even from that height it’s devastating.”

Kyi Minn likened the impact to the 2004 tsunami that swept across the Indian Ocean, killing 220,000 people in a dozen countries but causing little damage in Myanmar.