A man passes heavily damaged vehicles while
surveying storm damage on the campus of Union University in
Jackson, Tennessee Feb. 6, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
A Jackson police officer surveys the campus
of Union University Feb. 6, 2008, after tornadoes and thunderstorms
swept through the area the night before. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo)
Dozens of people were killed and hundreds more injured as more
than 50 tornadoes slammed into a string of the southern U.S. states
late Tuesday and early Wednesday, U.S. media reported.
Authorities went door-to-door early Wednesday in search for more
victims after the devastating tornadoes ripped through the southern
U.S. states of Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky and Mississippi, the
reports said.
CNN said at least 45 people were killed. The Associated Press
put the toll at at least 44, including 24 people in Tennessee, 13
in Arkansas, and seven in Kentucky.
Latest CNN video pictures showed the impact of the tornadoes
--roofs of houses ripped off and big trees uprooted in Arkansas,
turning the severe weather into a widespread disaster.
"This was an extraordinary night," the Associated Press quoted
Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe as saying. "When it's compounded by
darkness, that makes it that much more difficult."
The earliest reports came at midnight Tuesday, saying that a
severe storm collapsed part of the roof and walls of a shopping
mall in Memphis, Tennessee, but no casualties were reported.
In Atkinds, central Arkansas, a couple and their 11-year-old
daughter were killed after their home was directly hit as a tornado
touched down in the residential area where they lived.
Local police said debris including parts of houses, left by the
devastating tornados, blocked U.S. Highway 62.
At least six tornadoes touched down between Oxford, Mississippi,
and Jackson, Tennessee, and more than 30 people were injured in the
two states, the Associated Press said.
At least 13 people in Memphis were taken to hospital with two
people in a critical condition.
The Union University in Jackson, 120 kilometers northeast of
Memphis, also suffered some damage in the fierce winds. Eight
students were trapped in a battered dormitory at the university and
were later rescued.
Before dawn Wednesday, the severe weather system moved on to
Alabama and brought heavy rains and gusty winds to the southern
U.S. state, causing several injuries.
The brutal weather came at the end of the Super Tuesday
primaries in several states. As the extent of the damages quickly
became clear, candidates including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama
and Mike Huckabee paused in their victory speeches to honor the
victims.
On Aug. 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina, one of the worst natural
disasters in U.S. history, devastated the Gulf Coast, killing at
least 1,212 people, displacing thousands and costing the country up
to 200 billion U.S. dollars.
(Xinhua News Agency February 7, 2008)