Seven killed as thunderstorms and tornadoes rip through US states
- Seven people died due to severe thunderstorms and tornadoes across several U.S. States, including Missouri and Tennessee, according to various reports.
- A tornado emergency was declared in Blytheville, Arkansas, with debris reported at 25,000 feet, according to Chelly Amin, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.
- The National Weather Service warned of severe weather, including flash flooding, affecting over 90 million people from Texas to Minnesota and Maine.
- The National Weather Service warned of life-threatening flash flooding risks, with historic rainfall totals expected across parts of Arkansas, Missouri, Kentucky, and Indiana.
554 Articles
554 Articles

US storms, ‘severe’ flooding death toll climbs to 16
Violent storms battering the central-eastern United States have killed at least 16 people, officials said, with the National Weather Service warning on Saturday of "severe" flash flooding in the coming days. A line of fierce storms stretching from Arkansas to Ohio has damaged buildings, flooded roadways and produced dozens of tornadoes in recent days. Tennessee
16 dead in US storms, flooding, tornadoes
DYERSBURG, Tennessee. — Another round of torrential rain and flash flooding came Saturday for parts of the South and Midwest already heavily waterlogged by days of severe storms that also spawned deadly tornadoes. Forecasters warned that rivers in some places would continue to rise for days. Day after day of heavy rains have pounded the central U.S., rapidly swelling waterways and prompting a series of flash flood emergencies in from Texas to Oh…
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