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Thursday 28 April 2011

Storms kills dozens in Alabama and southern US

Governors in Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee have each declared a state of emergency

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Severe storms in the US state of Alabama have killed at least 45 people, officials say, as tornadoes tore across the southern US.

A huge twister levelled parts of the Alabama city of Tuscaloosa, killing at least 15, as storms caused havoc from Texas to Georgia.

In total at least 60 people have died across the southern US in the past day.

US President Barack Obama has approved emergency aid for Alabama, including search and rescue assistance.

Wednesday's storms also killed 11 people in Mississippi, two in Georgia and one in both Arkansas and Tennessee, reports said.

The southern weather systems followed fatal storms which careered through Arkansas and a swathe of the central US earlier this week.

The current storm system was forecast to hit North and South Carolina before making its way further north-east.

Governors in Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee have each declared a state of emergency as a result of the newest round of heavy winds, rains and tornadoes.

President Obama declared a state of emergency for Alabama, releasing federal aid money.

"While we may not know the extent of the damage for days, we will continue to monitor these severe storms across the country and stand ready to continue to help the people of Alabama and all citizens affected by these storms," Mr Obama said in a statement on Wednesday night.

US media reported a tornado near Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, just outside Washington DC, on Wednesday evening.

Reduced to rubble

Tuscaloosa Mayor Walter Maddox told the Associated Press news agency that at least 15 people had died there. At least 100 more were said to be hurt.

Storm damage in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 27 April Parts of Tuscaloosa have been decimated by a tornado

"The city experienced widespread damage from a tornado that cut a path of destruction deep into the heart of the city," he said in a statement.

A hospital in the city, which has a population of about 83,000, said its emergency room had admitted at least 100 people.

The damage from the tornado that struck near Tuscaloosa was made worse by earlier storms, which allowed the new storm system to uproot entire trees out of loose, wet mud, Michael Sznajderman, a spokesman for the Alabama Power Company, told the New York Times newspaper.

He added that at least 335,000 customers were without power in the region, with more storms on the way.

"The number of outages could be as high as what we saw with Hurricane Ivan or Hurricane Katrina," Mr Sznajderman told the newspaper.

Police officer death

Early on Wednesday, a police officer from Louisiana on a camping trip with his family in Choctaw County in Mississippi was killed by a falling tree while using his body as a shield to protect his daughter from the storm, a supervisor with the National Park Service told AP.

A gas station in Alabama with a collapsed roof Suspected tornadoes are being blamed for damaged roofs and downed power lines across the South

The nine-year-old girl escaped uninjured, although scared and drenched, and was looked after by a campsite volunteer.

Mississippi was the site of 11 more deaths on Wednesday, with a tree crushing one man in his mobile home and a truck driver dying after hitting a fallen tree.

Downed trees blocked roads and highways in both Mississippi and Alabama, hindering rescue efforts by emergency responders.

A women was also killed in eastern Tennessee on Wednesday when trees fell on her trailer home in Chattanooga.

Storm systems have pummelled states across the southern US for weeks, with severe weather being blamed for the deaths of 10 people in Arkansas and one in Mississippi earlier this week.

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