Hundreds stranded in North Carolina
floods after Hurricane Matthew
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[October 11, 2016]
By Jonathan Drake
LUMBERTON, N.C. (Reuters) - Hundreds of
people were rescued by boat and helicopter as floodwaters inundated
North Carolina towns on Monday in the wake of Hurricane Matthew, and
officials warned that life-threatening flooding from swollen rivers
would continue for days.
Matthew, the most powerful Atlantic storm since 2007, was downgraded to
a post-tropical cyclone on Sunday.
The hurricane killed around 1,000 people in Haiti and United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Monday some Haitian towns and
villages had just about been "wiped off the map."
In the United States, the number of fatalities rose to at least 23, with
nearly half in North Carolina.
North Carolina's skies were clear on Monday after the state received as
much as 18 inches (39 cm) of rain from Matthew over the weekend, but
raging rivers and breached levees posed major problems.
“This storm is not over in North Carolina," Governor Pat McCrory told
reporters in Fayetteville. “It’s going to be a long, tough journey."
Eleven people have died in the state, officials said. With rivers
rising, the governor said he expected deaths to increase.
The flooding prompted President Barack Obama to declare a state of
emergency in North Carolina on Monday, making federal funding available
to affected individuals in 10 counties hit by the storm, the White House
said in a statement.
Some 2,000 residents were stuck in their homes and on rooftops in
Lumberton, off the Lumber River, after the city flooded suddenly on
Monday morning, McCrory said. Air and water rescues would continue
throughout the day, he said.
Many of the homes and businesses in Lumberton were flooded with several
feet of water on Monday afternoon and residents were seen paddling about
the town in small skiffs.
Major flooding was expected this week in central and eastern towns along
the Lumber, Cape Fear, Neuse and Tar rivers. The National Weather
Service said the Neuse River would crest on Friday night and forecast
"disastrous flooding."
Emergency officials in North Carolina's Lenoir County issued a mandatory
evacuation order on Monday afternoon for residents and businesses along
the Neuse River.
"IT BREAKS YOUR HEART"
Many coastal and inland communities remained under water from storm
surge or overrun rivers and creeks.
McCrory told reporters that he had met an elderly woman at a shelter on
Monday who lost everything to floods.
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Evacuees ride on a truck as they are evacuated from a flood area as
a result of Hurricane Matthew in Lumberton, North Carolina, U.S.
October 10, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
“She’s sitting in a school cafeteria at this point in time crying
and wondering what her life is going to be all about,” he said. "It
breaks your heart."
In neighboring South Carolina, Governor Nikki Haley warned that
waterways were quickly reaching capacity around the state.
"What might not be flooded today could be flooded tomorrow," Haley
told a news conference.
She said there had been at least three storm-related deaths,
including one in which a person in a vehicle was swept away by
floodwaters.
Warnings were also issued over downed power lines. An 89-year-old
man was killed in Florida on Monday after touching a downed line,
officials said.
About 715,000 homes and businesses were without power on Monday
night in Florida, Georgia, North and South Carolina and Virginia.
A federal judge on Monday granted a request from Florida's
Democratic Party to extend the state's voter registration deadline
by one more day, through Wednesday, because of the hurricane.
Republican Governor Rick Scott had rejected demands from Democrats
to extend the deadline.
A hurricane watch was issued for Bermuda, which could be threatened
by another tropical system, Nicole, that is expected to reach the
Atlantic island later this week, the U.S. National Hurricane Center
said.
(Additional reporting by Letitia Stein in Tampa, Florida and Gene
Cherry in Raleigh, N.C.; Writing by Timothy Mclaughlin and Laila
Kearney; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Tom Brown and Paul Tait)
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