A freak tornado ripped through northern France overnight, killing three people and injuring nine as it gutted houses and hurled cars through the air, officials said yesterday.
Packing violent winds and lashing rain, the flash storm tore across a 10km swathe late on Sunday night, destroying some 40 homes in the space of minutes in Hautmont, the worst-hit of the four towns on its path.
“There was a deep roaring sound, like a bomb raid,” said Hautmont resident Erick Filleur, who was jolted out of his sleep by the storm.
“My wife was watching television. Then suddenly my daughter cried out, my shutters exploded and part of our roof flew off,” he said.
A woman in her seventies was killed when her house caved in, medics said, while rescue workers yesterday pulled the bodies of the deputy mayor of Hautmont and his wife from the rubble of their home.
“The windows of my apartment suddenly blew up. I lay down on the ground, I just thought I was going to die,” said Mustapha Rbide, another of the town’s 16,000 residents.
His neighbor, Samia Sayah, said her baby’s crib was sent flying around the bedroom by the force of the wind, although the seven-month-old child was unharmed.
Torn metal sheets, ripped electric cabling, roof tiles, gravel and bricks littered the town’s two worst-hit streets Monday morning, as 200 rescue workers with sniffer dogs combed the debris for possible victims.
Red Cross volunteers were handing out hot drinks and biscuits, blankets and clothes as shocked residents wandered through the streets, snapping pictures of the devastation with their mobile phones.
Of the nine injured, the two most seriously hurt were in the nearby town of Boussieres-sur-Sambre, as their house was reduced to rubble.
Four elderly people were also taken to hospital for observation after the storm struck a retirement home in Hautmont. The hospital roof in nearby Maubeuge was also damaged.
Local rail traffic was also cut after the storm, which struck at about 11pm on Sunday, brought down local power lines, according to French rail operator SNCF.
Several dozen elderly residents and a few families spent the night huddled in a local cultural center turned into a makeshift shelter for the night.
A handful of distraught residents, shocked and some of them injured, were still sheltering there yesterday.
When Shanghai-based designer Guo Qingshan posted a vacation photo on Valentine’s Day and captioned it “Puppy Mountain,” it became a sensation in China and even created a tourist destination. Guo had gone on a hike while visiting his hometown of Yichang in central China’s Hubei Province late last month. When reviewing the photographs, he saw something he had not noticed before: A mountain shaped like a dog’s head rested on the ground next to the Yangtze River, its snout perched at the water’s edge. “It was so magical and cute. I was so excited and happy when I discovered it,” Guo said.
Chinese authorities said they began live-fire exercises in the Gulf of Tonkin on Monday, only days after Vietnam announced a new line marking what it considers its territory in the body of water between the nations. The Chinese Maritime Safety Administration said the exercises would be focused on the Beibu Gulf area, closer to the Chinese side of the Gulf of Tonkin, and would run until tomorrow evening. It gave no further details, but the drills follow an announcement last week by Vietnam establishing a baseline used to calculate the width of its territorial waters in the Gulf of Tonkin. State-run Vietnam News
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