USA
This article was added by the user . TheWorldNews is not responsible for the content of the platform.

At least 23 dead as tornadoes batter the South and Midwest

At least 23 people are dead after a major storm system ripped through the Midwest, the South and the Mid-Atlantic, bringing tornadoes and severe thunderstorms through Saturday night.

The latest fatality was reported in Delaware's Sussex County, where an apparent tornado struck southeast of the small community of Greenwood, said county spokesperson Chip Guy.

It wasn't clear how many people, if any, were injured, but "several structures were damaged," he said.

Officials in Delaware were waiting for another line of severe weather to move through before conducting recovery operations, Guy said. The apparent tornado was part of the same thunderous weather system that struck the Midwest and South overnight.

Seven of the deaths are in McNairy County in southwestern Tennessee, according to the state’s Emergency Management Agency. The National Weather Service usually confirms tornado reports by putting people on the ground to assess damage, which can take time.

"We will be surveying damage from likely tornadoes that struck many of our Middle Tennessee counties overnight, including Wayne, Lewis, Marshall, Rutherford, Cannon, and Macon Counties," the weather service field office in Nashville said on Saturday. "Due to the widespread damage, it will take us several days to reach all these areas."

The damage includes downed trees, power lines and "houses with heavy damage" in multiple counties, according to a list of storm reports collected by the agency.

Five of the deaths are in Cross and Pulaski counties in Arkansas, four are in Boone and Crawford counties in Illinois, three are in Sullivan County, Indiana, one in Pontotac County, Mississippi, one in Madison County, Alabama, and one in Tipton County, Tennessee, according to officials.

Wynne, a city in Arkansas' northeastern Cross County where four people died, saw widespread damage from the storm system, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a tweet.

Central Arkansas also suffered “significant damage” Friday, Sanders said, after meteorologists said a tornado touched down in North Little Rock, pummeling buildings and leaving at least three people dead and dozens injured.

"Today has been a very hard day for the state of Arkansas," Sanders said at a news conference on Friday. "But the goodness of this is that Arkansas and Arkansans are tough and we are resilient, and no matter what comes our way, we will get back up the next day and keep moving."

Arkansas declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard on Friday afternoon. At a news conference Friday, Sanders said 100 guardsmen had been deployed across the state.