Amerika dilaporkan dilanda musibah sejak kebelakangan ini. Minggu lepas kebakaran besar dilaporkan berlaku dan memusnahkan beribu-ribu kawasan hutan.
Yang terkini Amerika dilanda ribut taufan dan angin kencang yang mengakibatkan banjir besar serta kemusnahan teruk. Dilaporkan juga berjuta-juta rakyatnya terpaksa bergelap kerana ketiadaan bekalan lektrik.
Ada bidang yang Amerika ini hebat dan ada bidang terutamanya dalam menghadapi bencana alam, Amerika ternyata gagal, seperti gagalnya Obama menghalang seorang Paderi membakar Al-Quran tidak beberapa lama dahulu.
Storms: Mid-Atlantic power outages could last days
By | Associated Press – 4 hrs ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — It could be
several more days before electricity is restored to areas hit by vicious storms
that killed at least 13 people and left 3 million power customers to negotiate
sweltering temperatures without air conditioning.
Across a swath from Indiana to New Jersey and south to
Virginia,
officials warned the heat wave could take a toll on the elderly, young or sick.
Problems from the storms that began Friday ranged from a damaged prison in
Illinois to tree-strewn train tracks that stranded 232 Amtrak passengers for
more than 20 hours in West Virginia.
Emergencies have been declared in Maryland,
West Virginia, Ohio, the District of Columbia and Virginia, where Gov. Bob
McDonnell said the state had its largest non-hurricane outage in history, as
more storms threatened. "This is a very dangerous situation," the governor
said.
Power officials said the outages wouldn't be repaired for several days to a
week.
The storm did damage from Indiana to New
Jersey, although the bulk of it was in West Virginia, Washington and the
capital's Virginia and
Maryland suburbs. At least six of the dead were killed in Virginia,
including a 90-year-old woman asleep in her bed when a tree slammed into her
home. Two young cousins in New Jersey were killed when a tree fell on
their tent while camping. Two were killed in Maryland, one in Ohio, one in
Kentucky and one in Washington.
In Washington's northern Virginia suburbs, emergency 911 call centers were
out of service; residents were told to call local police and fire departments.
Huge trees toppled across streets in the nation's capital, crumpling cars. Cell
phone and Internet service was spotty, gas stations shut down and residents were
urged to conserve water.
The power outages were especially dangerous because they left the region
without air conditioning in an oppressive heat wave. Temperatures soared to
highs in the mid-90s Saturday in Baltimore and Washington, a day after readings
of up to 104 degrees were reported in the region.
Three Baltimore City fire companies set to
permanently close this week were staying open several more days to help
cope.
Utility officials said it could take at
least several days to restore power to all customers because of the sheer
magnitude of the outages and destruction. Winds and toppled trees brought down
entire power lines, and debris has to be cleared from power stations and other
structures.
"The devastation ... is very significant," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie
said after ordering the National Guard to deliver fuel for generators and fresh
water to stricken areas. He reported that power had been restored to such
tourist areas as Atlantic City's casinos.
Illinois corrections officials transferred
78 inmates from a prison in Dixon to the Pontiac Correctional Center after
storms Friday night caused significant damage in the state, Department of
Corrections spokeswoman Stacey Solano said.
No one was injured, Solano said. Generators are providing power to the
prison, which is locked down, confining remaining inmates to their cells.
In Indiana, a toppled tree crushed the top of Vicki Hunt's car and smashed
the back window.
"It came so fast," the Fort Wayne woman told broadcaster WPTA-TV. "All of a
sudden all you heard was a swoosh, and next thing you know the tree fell ... we
heard a big crash, which obviously was my car."
In West Virginia, 232 Amtrak passengers were stranded Friday night on a train
blocked on both sides of the tracks by toppled trees.
Brooke Richart, a 26-year-old teacher from New York City, was among the
passengers stranded for 20 hours. She read half a book and took walks outside
the train, which had light, air conditioning and food the entire time. But she
called the wait "trying."
"Thankfully we could go in and out of the train because we were there so
long. If you wanted to stretch your legs or take a walk, you could," she
said.
Amtrak spokesman Steve Kulm said passengers were taken away by buses Saturday
night.
Some major online services also saw delays and disruptions.
Netflix, Instagram and Pinterest resorted to using Twitter and Facebook to
update subscribers after violent storms across the eastern U.S. caused server
outages for hours. Netflix and Pinterest restored service by Saturday
afternoon.
Instagram used its Facebook fan page to communicate with users of its
photo-sharing service. It posted a message on Saturday morning that blamed the
electrical storm for the outage that sent its engineers scrambling to restore
service.
Meanwhile, utilities said they were struggling to restore power amid the heat
wave.
Myra Oppel, a spokeswoman for the utility Pepco, reported over 400,000
outages in Washington and its suburbs. "We do understand the hardship that this
brings, especially with the heat as intense at is. We will be working around the
clock until we get the last customer on."
Especially at risk were children, the sick
and the elderly.
In Charleston, W.Va., firefighters helped
several people using walkers and wheelchairs get to emergency shelters. One of
them, David Gunnoe, uses a wheelchair and had to spend the night in the
community room of his apartment complex because the power — and his elevator —
went out.
Rescuers went up five floors to retrieve his medication.
Rescuers went up five floors to retrieve his medication.
Others sought refuge in shopping malls,
movie theaters and other places where the air conditioning would be cranked
up.
In Richmond, Va., Tracey Phalen relaxed
with her teenage son under the shade of a coffee-house umbrella rather than
suffer through the stifling heat in a home without power. Phalen said Hurricane
Irene left her home dark for six days last summer, "and this is reminiscent of
that."
Robert Clements, 28, said he showered by
flashlight Friday night after losing power at his Fairfax, Va., home. His
fiancee learned electricity wouldn't be restored for days at her apartment
complex so she booked a hotel Saturday to beat the heat.
"It feels like an oven," said Clements'
fiancee, Ann Marie Tropiano, of the apartment she left behind.
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