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WSWS : News
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America
More than 20 killed as tornadoes strike the southern US
By Hiram Lee
13 May 2008
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More than 20 people were killed this weekend when at least
77 tornadoes touched down across the southern and southwestern
United States. The storms claimed lives in Oklahoma, Georgia,
and Missouri, while causing considerable damage in several other
states. The latest wave of storms has helped to make 2008 the
deadliest tornado season in a decade and the seventh deadliest
since 1950, when such records first began being kept.
On Sunday, an EF-4 tornado, which carries the second highest
rating possible, touched down in Picher, Oklahoma, killing six
and destroying home after home. Trees were ripped from the ground
and torn to splinters while cars were left twisted and mangled.
Frank Geasland, head of Emergency Management in the area, told
reporters, It looks like a bomb went off.
Picher is a heavily polluted former mining town. Once home
to a population of 20,000 people, the town now has just 800 inhabitants.
The tornado blew leftover waste from the towns lead and
zinc mines, closed for more than a decade, into the air making
it necessary for officials to run tests to determine any possible
health risks. Many of the towns residents had begun taking
part in a federal buyout program with the Environmental Protection
Agency due to health risks already presented by the polluted environment.
It remains unclear how those involved in the buyout whose homes
were destroyed in the storms will be affected.
In Missouri, where at least 15 were killed, inadequate shelter
appears to have been a major factor in the number of fatalities.
Most of the deaths involved people whose homes had no basements
or solid foundations and those who were compelled to take refuge
in their cars. Many mobile homes were simply blown away, never
to be seen again. As the Kansas City Star put it in one
headline, Safety hard to find in storm that killed 15.
Mobile homes are involved in half of all tornado deaths in
the United States. In the absence of safe, affordable housing,
poor and working class people are often forced to turn to such
inadequate structures, which provide little or no shelter in severe
weather conditions. This is the social element, often ignored
by the mainstream news media in their coverage of such events,
which compounds otherwise natural disasters, leading to deaths
that might have been prevented had more suitable shelter been
available.
Just as in Missouri, housing was a factor again as a man was
killed and his wife and children injured when one of half-a-dozen
tornadoes destroyed their mobile home near Dublin, Georgia. Six
thousand homes in all were destroyed across the state, with an
estimated $50 million in insured losses. Prison labor is currently
being used during cleanup in Clayton, the county hardest hit by
the storms. Several dozen inmates were seen Monday cutting away
damaged trees and removing debris from the property of county
residents.
Meteorologists have attributed the increase in the number and
intensity of these and similar storms this year to several factors
including sharp temperature contrasts in the US, warming in the
Gulf of Mexico, and progressive jet stream patterns. While some
meteorologists have chosen to play down the effect of global warming
on such disasters, in August 2007, researchers with NASAs
Goddard Institute for Space Studies developed climate models which
made clear that tornadoes and thunderstorms will grow more intense
as the Earths temperature rises.
With poor quality housing and inadequate warning systems such
as sirens in rural areas playing such a major role in severe weather
deaths, one fears new records in the numbers of fatalities will
only be made and broken in the near future.
See Also:
Recent tornadoes in the Southern
US: both a natural and social disaster
[13 February 2008]
Tornadoes kill at least 54
in Southern US states
[7 February 2008]
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