Severe weather with tennis ball-sized hailstones, tornadoes in US leave 15 dead
Powerful storms have caused extensive damage in the southern and midwestern regions of the United States, with at least 15 lives lost.
Rescue workers and police searched for victims in the rubble and treated dozens of injured people. Deaths were reported in Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Kentucky, according to US media on May 26.
Tornadoes were reported in many places overnight on May 25. US media reported hailstones that were about the size of tennis balls.
According to initial estimates, one of the storms in Oklahoma reached at least level three out of five. Tornadoes of this classification can reach speeds of up to 265 kilometres per hour.
According to media, almost 5,00,000 people in nine US states were without power on the evening of May 26. A state of emergency was declared in several regions.
Cooke County, near Dallas, was hit hard by winds that destroyed a motorway service area and ravaged a trailer park, resulting in the deaths of seven people, including four children, according to the sheriff.
More than 100 people were injured, and hundreds of houses were destroyed throughout Texas, said Greg Abbott, the state’s governor.
Experts attribute the rise in natural disasters in the US - such as storms, floods, and forest fires - to the impacts of climate change.
According to the US National Weather Service, the frequency of tornadoes has increased in recent years.
(This story was taken from a syndicated feed, and edited only for style by Gujarat Samachar Digital staff)
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