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Raging wildfires destroy US homes | Raging wildfires destroy US homes |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Wildfires have destroyed dozens of homes and forced evacuations in the US states of Oklahoma and Texas, reportedly killing two people. | |
Firefighters are struggling to contain the blazes, which started on Thursday and were worsened by strong winds. | |
Dozens more people were injured, two seriously, by the fires, which prompted the closure of a motorway in Oklahoma. | |
Meanwhile in neighbouring Arkansas a tornado struck the town of Mena, killing three and injuring at least 22. | |
Local authorities are assessing the damage and looking for more possible victims. | |
The storm uprooted 100-year-old trees, hit Civil War-era homes and tore the roof off a community college. | |
The Associated Press quoted the county sheriff as saying the sky turned green before the tornado hit. | |
The tornado and fires are part of a storm system which has caused power cuts and damage all over the south and mid-west US. A woman was injured when a tree fell on her car in Louisiana. | |
'Can't get ahead' | |
Fires damaged around 100 homes and buildings in north-eastern Oklahoma, police said, while two towns in Texas were also badly affected. | |
Television footage in the towns of Sunset and Stoneburg showed scores of charred homes, while some blazes still raged. | Television footage in the towns of Sunset and Stoneburg showed scores of charred homes, while some blazes still raged. |
Local media quoted family members as saying that TV reporter Matt Quinn and his wife Cathy were killed when fires engulfed their northern Texas home. | |
Oklahoma's health department reported 34 people injured throughout the state. | |
Interstate 35, Oklahoma's main north-south highway, was closed for several hours, as many of the fires were raging alongside it. | |
Winds, at one point equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane, have been hindering firefighters. | |
"The wind is the biggest issue, because we can't get ahead of the fires," said Jerry Lojka, the fire marshal for Midwest City, Oklahoma. | "The wind is the biggest issue, because we can't get ahead of the fires," said Jerry Lojka, the fire marshal for Midwest City, Oklahoma. |
Midwest City police Chief Brandon Clabes described scorched areas as "a war zone", AP news agency reported. | Midwest City police Chief Brandon Clabes described scorched areas as "a war zone", AP news agency reported. |