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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 6
    days
    ago

    One million flee as Cyclone Mahasen batters Bangladesh coast

    Cyclone Mahasen slammed into Bangladesh's low-lying coast as evacuees huddled in shelters from a storm the United Nations says threatens 4.1 million people. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Farid Hossain, The Associated Press

    COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh -- Cyclone Mahasen struck the southern coast of Bangladesh on Thursday, lashing remote fishing villages with heavy rain and fierce winds that flattened mud and straw huts and forced the evacuation of more than 1 million people.

    The main section of the storm reached land Thursday and immediately began weakening, according to Mohammad Shah Alam, director of the Bangladesh Meteorological Department. However, its forward movement was also slowing, meaning that towns in its path would have to weather the storm for longer, he said.

    Even before the brunt of the storm hit, at least 18 deaths related to Mahasen were reported in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

    The U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs had said Wednesday that depending on its trajectory, the storm could bring life-threatening conditions to about 8.2 million people in Bangladesh, Myanmar and northeast India. But the storm appeared to spare at least some areas once thought to be at risk.

    In the seafront resort town of Cox's Bazar, tens of thousands of people had fled shanty homes along the coast and packed into cyclone shelters, hotels, schools and government office buildings. But by Thursday afternoon, the sun was shining and local government administrator Ruhul Amin said he planned to close the shelters by that evening.

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Bangladeshi pedestrians gather to watch the sea at a beach while Cyclone Mahasen heads toward landfall in Chittagong on Thursday.

    "Thank God we have been spared this time," Amin said.

    Mahasen hit land with maximum wind speeds of about 62 mph and quickly weakened to 56 mph, said Alam, the meteorological official.

    Along Myanmar's western coast, danger was particularly high for tens of thousands of displaced Rohingya people living in plastic-roofed tents and huts made of reeds in dozens of refugee camps.

    Gemunu Amarasinghe / AP

    An internally displaced Rohingya man pushes a rickshaw with children and belongings leaving a camp for displaced Rohingya people in Sittwe, northwestern Rakhine State, in Myanmar on Thursday. Members of the displaced minority started moving to safer shelters ahead of the arrival of Cyclone Mahasen.

    Driven from their homes by violence, some members of the Muslim minority group refused to follow evacuation orders. Many distrust officials in the majority-Buddhist country, where Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination.

    U.N. officials, hoping they would inspire greater trust, fanned out across the area to encourage people to leave. They said Thursday that more than 35,000 people had been relocated.

    In Bangladesh, river ferries and boat service were suspended, and scores of factories near the choppy Bay of Bengal were closed. The military said it was keeping 22 navy ships and 19 Air Force helicopters at the ready.

    "We have seen such a disaster before," said Mohammad Abu Taleb, who shut down his convenience shop in Cox's Bazar, a city of 200,000. "It's better to stay home. I'm not taking any chance."

    A 1991 cyclone that slammed into Bangladesh from the Bay of Bengal killed an estimated 139,000 people and left millions homeless. In 2008, Myanmar's southern delta was devastated Cyclone Nargis, which swept away entire farming villages and killed more than 130,000 people. Both those cyclones were much more powerful than Cyclone Mahasen, which is rated Category 1 — the weakest level.

    Heavy rain and storm surge could prove deadlier than the wind. Bangladesh's meteorological office said the cyclone was moving so slowly it may take a whole day for it to pass the Bangladesh coast.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    48 comments

    "Many distrust officials in the majority-Buddhist country, where Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination." Many Muslims appear to have some mental problems. Some Muslims always feel they are discriminated and so they want special treatments; afterwards they want Sharia Laws for them first and  …

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    Explore related topics: weather, bangladesh, storm, flood, myanmar, featured, cyclone, mahasen
  • Updated
    9
    May
    2013
    4:09am, EDT

    Air conditioners banned as Pakistan prepares for sweltering summer

    Omer Saleem / EPA, file

    Office workers experience a prolonged power cut in Lahore, Pakistan, on February 25.

    ISLAMABAD -- Pakistan's prime minister has decided to ban the use of air conditioners by government offices to help cope with the country's pervasive energy shortages.

    A statement issued Wednesday from Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso's office says the ban will go into effect on May 15 and will continue until the energy situation improves.

    Pakistan faces serious shortages of electricity and natural gas.

    The ban could make for a very uncomfortable summer since temperatures in Pakistan often reach 104 degrees Fahrenheit.

    The prime minister also issued a summer dress code recommending light-colored, loose-fitting clothing to help combat the heat.

    The Associated Press

    Related:

    • From alcohol to kites: An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'
    • Full Pakistan coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Thu May 9, 2013 4:05 AM EDT

    243 comments

    "Pakistan faces serious shortages of electricity and natural gas." When there are shortages of good and sane human beings, this is what happens. Pakistan, a pure Islamic nation, has become Banistan and Hate and Killistan. Many Pakis have become inventors of problems for themselves and those going ne …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, weather, pakistan, air-conditioning, featured, updated
  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    12:27pm, EDT

    Flooding kills at least 46 people in Argentina

    Daniel Garcia / AFP - Getty Images

    A soldier evacuates an elderly woman in a flooded street in La Plata, 39 miles southeast of Buenos Aires, Argentina, on April 3.

    Natacha Pisarenko / AP

    People embrace outside a club where the Red Cross set up a center to help flood victims in La Plata, in Argentina's Buenos Aires province, on April 4.

    Natacha Pisarenko / AP

    Vilma Gorostiaga cries outside her home as she dries her family pictures on the ground in La Plata, in Argentina's Buenos Aires province, on April 4.

    By Reuters

    Flash floods killed at least 46 people and forced about 1,500 residents to evacuate the Argentine city of La Plata, capital of Buenos Aires province, government officials said on Wednesday.

    Some people drowned after being trapped in their cars or while walking along city streets when the water rose suddenly on Tuesday night, while others were electrocuted, provincial governor Daniel Scioli told reporters. Continue reading.

    Natacha Pisarenko / AP

    Juan Fernandez sits inside a club where the Red Cross set up a help center for people affected by flooding after his home was damaged in La Plata, in Argentina's Buenos Aires province, on April 4.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures
    Previously on PhotoBlog:
    • Record rains, flooding in Buenos Aires kill 5
    • Copahue volcano spews ash in Argentina
    • Perito Moreno glacier experiences first major ice fall since 2008

    1 comment

    I will cry for you, Argentina.

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  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    2:18am, EDT

    Global warming paradox: More sea ice around Antarctica in winter, study says

    NASA via Reuters, file

    The Sheldon Glacier with Mount Barre in the background, is seen from Ryder Bay near Rothera Research Station, Adelaide Island, Antarctica, in this NASA handout photo.

    By Alister Doyle, Reuters

    OSLO, Norway - Global warming is expanding the extent of sea ice around Antarctica in winter in a paradoxical shift caused by cold plumes of summer melt water that re-freeze fast when temperatures drop, according to a study unveiled Sunday.

    An increasing summer thaw of ice on the edges of Antarctica, twinned with less than expected snowfall on the frozen continent, is also adding slightly to sea level rise in a threat to low-lying areas around the world, it said.

    Climate scientists have been struggling to explain why sea ice around Antarctica has been growing, reaching a record extent in the winter of 2010, when ice on the Arctic Ocean at the other end of the planet shrank to a record low in 2012.

    Sinead Farrell / NASA

    Ice floes are shown at the foot of an iceberg in Antarctica's Amundsen Sea in October 2010.



    "Sea ice around Antarctica is increasing despite the warming global climate," said Richard Bintanja, lead author of the study at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute.

    "This is caused by melting of the ice sheets from below," he told Reuters of the findings in the journal Nature Geoscience.

    Ice is made of fresh water and, when ice shelves on the fringes of Antarctica thaw in summer because of upwellings of warming sea water, the meltwater forms a cool layer that floats on the denser, warmer salty sea water below, the study said.

    In winter, the melt water readily turns to ice because it freezes at zero degrees Celsius, above sea water at -2C (28.4F).

    At a winter maximum in September, ice on the sea around Antarctica covers about 19 million sq kms (7.3 million sq miles), bigger than Antarctica's land area. It then melts away into the ocean as summer approaches.

    Among other scientists, Paul Holland of the British Antarctic Survey stuck to his findings last year that a shift in winds linked to climate change was blowing a layer of melt water further out to sea and adding to winter ice.

    "The possibility remains that the real increase is the sum of wind-driven and melt water-driven effects, of course. That would be my best guess, with the melt water effect being the smaller of the two," he said.

    Bintanja's study also said the cool melt water layer may limit the amount of water sucked from the oceans that falls as snow on Antarctica. Cold air can hold less moisture than warm.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Cool sea surface temperatures around Antarctica could offset projected snowfall increases in Antarctica, with implications for estimates of future sea-level rise," it said.

    The U.N. panel of climate scientists has estimated that sea levels will rise by between 18 and 59 cm (7-24 inches) this century, more if thaws of Antarctica and Greenland accelerate.

    The panel's main scenarios assume that Antarctica alone will make sea levels fall by between 2 and 14 cms this century because more snowfall will extract water from the sea.

    But Sunday's study said that Antarctica was losing about 250 billion tonnes of ice a year - equivalent to 0.07 millimetre(0.003 inch) of sea level rise a year, Bintanja said. "Antarctic mass loss seems to be accelerating," it said.

    Another study in Nature Geoscience said Antarctica's snowfall had been over-estimated by between 11 and 36.5 billion tonnes a year because of fierce winds blasting many regions.

    Strong winds created conditions to "sublimate" snow, or make it pass from a frozen state to a gas without first becoming liquid, a U.S.-led team wrote. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    172 comments

    Hookey Phalooey! Ocean floor is sinking, volcanic activity rising, magnetic field instability, low sunspot activity=facts. Man made 'global warming' is a CON. Climate extremes are a natural phenom. The liars & extortionists should be publicly horsewhipped. You first AL!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, global-warming, environment, climate-change, antarctica
  • 25
    Mar
    2013
    11:02am, EDT

    Sochi Winter Olympics organizers store snow, just in case

    Shaun Botterill / Getty

    Sochi, Russia - host city of the 2014 Olympic Winter Games

    By Gennady Fyodorov, Reuters

    SOCHI, Russia - While Moscow digs itself out of a huge snow storm that hit the Russian capital in the last few days, organizers of the Winter Olympics are worried a lack of white powder could become a problem next February.

    Unseasonably warm temperatures this winter in Sochi have forced local organizers to store some 450,000 cubic meters of snow in the nearby Caucasus Mountains that surround this sub-tropical Black Sea resort.

    "We've prepared seven separate areas for snow storage high up in the mountains," Sergei Bachin, general director of Roza Khutor, a ski resort in Krasnaya Polyana that will host Alpine skiing, snowboarding and freestyle Olympic competition, told Reuters.

    "I want to assure all the competitors that there won't be any shortage of snow next February even if we encounter even warmer temperatures next year," he said.

    "We're storing such huge amounts of snow just in case."

    The snow will be covered with a "special thermo seal", to protect it from melting during the summer, Bachin said.

    "We expect that about 140,000 (cubic meters) will melt away but we'll still have more than 300,000 cubic meters of snow available for next year," he predicted, saying the storage will cost his company an extra $11 million.

    Nevertheless, Sochi 2014 chief Dmitry Chernyshenko has stated on several occasions that the weather has become a bigger problem for the organizers, who are frantically trying to finish all the construction projects on time, than security or the infrastructure.

    Slideshow: Sochi 2014

    Mikhail Mordasov / AFP - Getty Images

    The Winter Olympics arrive in Sochi on Feb. 7, 2014. A look at how the Russian city is shaping up for its moment in the spotlight.

    Launch slideshow

    Bachin, however, assured that Krasnaya Polyana, once a sleepy mountain village, about 70 kilometers from central Sochi, would be ready to host all the outdoor Olympic events next February rain or shine.

    "Of the 76 Olympic test events scheduled in Krasnaya Polyana this winter a great majority had been completed and only a handful have been called off because of bad weather," he said.

    "I think we've passed the test as the last major event of the season was held this weekend in nearby Laura complex."

    Usually, Krasnaya Polyana has the opposite problem - too much snow and the risk of avalanches, Bachin said.

    "This was a very odd winter. Even locals don't remember when was the last time they had such warm days in the mountains. It's highly unlikely we'll see the same kind of weather next year," he added.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    'Exploitative, abusive': Activists slam conditions for workers at Olympic site

    How do you say 'volunteer' in Russian? Sochi 2014 Olympics introduces a new concept

    More Sochi coverage from NBC Olympics

     

     

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    9 comments

    The Olympics have become a joke. All they really amount to now are countries spending ridiculous amounts of money they don't have for an event that most everyone will forget about soon after they are over.

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    Explore related topics: sports, olympics, russia, weather, europe, world, snow, environment, climate, sochi, featured
  • 15
    Mar
    2013
    1:20pm, EDT

    Winter storm strands thousands of motorists overnight in eastern Europe

    Szilard Gergely / AFP - Getty Images

    A man walks past a damaged truck at the site of an accident on the E71 motorway, near the Croatian, Slovenian and Hungarian borders on Friday, a day after a heavy snow storm hit the area.

    By Krisztina Than, Reuters

    BUDAPEST - Hungary deployed tanks to reach thousands of motorists trapped in heavy snow on Friday as a sudden cold snap and high winds struck parts of the Balkans, Slovakia and Poland, leaving at least two people dead.

    Snow stranded people in cars, buses and trains through the night and conspired with strong winds to cut off dozens of towns and villages in Hungary.

    "The situation is most critical on the M1 motorway (linking Budapest and Vienna) where hundreds of cars are stranded in the snow, most of them for 18-20 hours now," said Marton Hajdu, spokesman for the National Directorate for Disaster Management.

    Reuters photographer traveling with a rescue convoy said high winds had caused snowdrifts on the motorway up to three feet high.

    People took to Facebook to appeal for help.


    "At the Gyorszentivan exit on the motorway I have friends stranded since yesterday evening," wrote Ibolya Csukovics. "Can anyone help? They've run out of food and drink."

    The government said it had sent in tanks and other military vehicles with caterpillar tracks.

    The weekend's premier league and second tier football fixtures were canceled, with night-time temperatures expected to drop as low as 5 degrees Fahrenheit).

    After a relatively mild winter for much of the region, almost 200,000 people in Hungary, Bulgaria and Slovakia were left shivering without electricity on Friday. Heavy rain hit parts of Serbia and Bosnia.

    In Bulgaria, one woman was killed when scaffolding collapsed in high winds in the central town of Gabrovo, and a school was evacuated in the southern town of Krichim when wind tore off the roof.

    To the south, in Kosovo, a 10-year-old girl drowned when a river burst its banks in heavy rain in the northern town of Skenderaj. Dozens of homes were flooded in the west of the country, a Reuters reporter said.

    "The situation is alarming," Klina municipality spokeswoman Samije Gjergjaj told Reuters. She said some 300 people were stranded by floodwater.

    "There's just one small boat evacuating these people," said Gjergjaj. "We're waiting for the state emergency services to help out."

    Heavy snow also paralyzed parts of southeastern Poland, where police banned heavy lorries from entering the city of Rzeszow for fear they would get stuck.

    In eastern Slovakia, snow stranded some 40 lorries on a highway in the High Tatras region. The army deployed hundreds of soldiers to help out and authorities appealed to people to avoid venturing out by car. 

    Alexey Gromov / AFP - Getty Images

    People struggle against wind and drifting snow in the Belarus capital, Minsk, on Friday.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    14 comments

    Zsofia you must be kidding?You do not even know what are you writing about. You disrespect all the firemen, police, ambulance, army crews who are facing the worst challange of their profession and were out there from the first moment. Stop being smart and blame things on someone else.

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    Explore related topics: weather, bosnia, serbia, winter, hungary, poland, slovakia
  • 15
    Mar
    2013
    12:58pm, EDT

    New Zealand parched as worst drought in 30 years takes toll

    Nick Perry / AP

    John Rose stands in a field on his dairy farm in New Zealand on Thursday. A drought on the country's North Island is costing farmers millions of dollars each day and is beginning to take a toll on the country's economy.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Authorities in Wellington, New Zealand, have issued an outright ban on outdoor water use as a worsening drought has siphoned the available supply to less than half of normal level and prompted the government to declare the worst water shortage in 30 years.

    New Zealand's capital, home to more than 200,000 people, has just 19 days' supply of water left in its reservoirs, the APNZ news service reported.

    "The water supply situation is now approaching extreme," the Greater Wellington Regional Council said in a statement on its website, adding that it is also asking residents to cut indoor water use "to help us avoid a crisis."

    Wellington hasn't seen a significant rain since Feb. 4, and while a storm is forecast for this weekend, it will have no real impact on the water supply, authorities said. All of the North Island, which holds most of the country's population, has been declared a drought zone. Auckland on Thursday issued an outdoor fire ban.


    The Wellington City Council said urgent action had to be taken to ensure that homes and businesses had sufficient water.

    "Water levels in our local rivers -- the source of our water supply -- are extremely low and dropping," the council said in a statement. "A significant reduction in demand for water will extend the number of days that back-up storage will last, so it’s important to save water now."

    The drought has had a major impact on farmers, who estimate that it has so far cost them $820 million in lost export earnings, The Associated Press reported, adding that the damage is rising daily as they reduce their herds, which in turn reduces milk production.

    "We are beginning to see a decline in milk production -- in fact, a sharp decline in some areas -- and farmers are considering slaughtering capital stock, which will result in lower future production and reduced revenue," New Zealand Finance Minister Bill English said Tuesday during a Parliament meeting.

    Brett Phibbs / AP

    Fields are turning from their normal green to a dry and crunchy brown as the drought worsens.

    "It's very hard to remember when the last rainfall was," dairy farmer John Rose told the AP, adding that he had sent more than 100 of his cows to slaughter in recent weeks as the drought turned pastures brown and dry. He said the move was necessary to make sure his remaining 550 cows had enough to eat -- a challenge even as he mixes in palm kernels with their feed to try to stretch it.

    Like most farmers, he's concerned about the future, as are some government officials.

    "We know the drought will peg back growth in the economy, but it is not yet clear by how much," English told Parliament.

    Even if the current drought eases soon, the long-term picture isn't rosy, according to climate scientists.

    The government's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research predicts that farmers in the southern part of the North Island, the area around Wellington, will spend up to 10 percent more time per year in drought by the middle of the century.

    More NBC News coverage of New Zealand

     

    28 comments

    The S.I isn't much better off. I have family on both islands and I skyped last week with my cousin on the S.I. She said things are really bad there, even more so on the N.I.

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-zealand, water, drought, auckland, featured, wellington, north-island
  • 12
    Mar
    2013
    6:15pm, EDT

    Winter's icy tentacles squeeze Europe

    Snow and blizzards have caused disruption across many parts of the UK. In East Sussex hundreds of motorists were trapped in their cars overnight while heavy falls in northern France have forced Eurostar to cancel all its trains. Channel 4's Paraic Obrien has the latest.

    2 comments

    Winter's icy testacles? I've never heard of such a thing.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, europe, winter, storms
  • 12
    Mar
    2013
    10:58am, EDT

    Snow disrupts transport across northwestern Europe

    Charly Triballeau / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman walks on a snowy road in Caen, northwestern France, during a heavy snowstorm on March 12, 2013. Overnight Monday nearly 500 cars were blocked near Cherbourg, where snowdrifts piled up almost two feet as winds reached more than 60 miles an hour.

    Pascal Rossignol / Reuters

    A man shovels snow off his car in Cambrai, northern France, on March 12, 2013.

    Nicolas Armer / EPA

    A snowplow removes snow at the airport in Frankfurt, Germany, on March 12, 2013. Over 200 flights were cancelled as bad weather hampered efforts by snow sweepers to clear runways and prevented airline crews from reaching work on time.

    Reuters reports — An overnight snowstorm in northwestern Europe forced the closure of Frankfurt Airport, caused record traffic jams in Belgium, and left British and French drivers sleeping in their cars. 

    Take-offs and landings at Europe's third-busiest airport were halted at around noon on Tuesday to clear snow from the runways. It was set to reopen at around 8.30 a.m. ET.

    The high-speed Eurostar train service connecting London with the French and Belgian capitals and the Thalys line linking Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam in the Netherlands and Cologne in Germany were both suspended. Read the full story.

    Charly Triballeau / AFP - Getty Images

    Firefighters rescue a driver who slid from a roadside during a heavy snowstorm in Caen, northwestern France, on March 12, 2013.

    Pascal Rossignol / Reuters

    Firefighters evacuate a man in Cambrai, northern France, on March 12, 2013 as winter weather with snow and freezing temperatures returns to the region.

    Ian Langsdon / EPA

    A pedestrian braves heavy snowfall on the snow-covered Champs de Mars near the Eiffel Tower in Paris on March 12, 2013.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: germany, weather, france, europe, snow, world-news
  • 22
    Feb
    2013
    6:13am, EST

    Dramatic rescues as torrential rainstorm hits Greek capital

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    A woman is rescued from floodwaters by a man standing on top of her car during heavy rain in the Chalandri suburb, north of Athens, Greece, on Feb. 22, 2013.

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    The woman had become stuck as water engulfed her car.

    John Kolesidis / Reuters

    The woman is carried to safety after being rescued.

    Pantelis Saitas / EPA

    An employee of the Greek Parliament hangs precariously after falling through the glass roof of the Greek Parliament Hall while trying to prevent rain water leaking into the building, in Athens on Feb. 22, 2013.

    Simela Pantzartzi / EPA

    People stand on a bench at a bus station during a heavy storm in Athens on Feb. 22, 2013.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    A heavy rainstorm in the Athens region on Friday morning flooded streets in the Greek capital and interrupted transport on land and sea. In the suburb of Chalandri, a woman had to be rescued from her car as raging torrents of water engulfed the vehicle.

    A worker at the Greek parliament had to be rescued after she crashed through the glass roof of the building while trying to stop a leak. The woman found herself hanging through a broken panel in the roof and was slightly injured, according to local reports cited by Xinhua.

    -- The European Pressphoto Agency and Reuters contributed to this report

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Heavy rains has caused widespread flooding in Italy and Greece. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    2 comments

    The Greeks just can't seem to get a break.

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  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    9:44am, EST

    5 killed, homes swept away as South Pacific quake triggers 3-foot tsunami

    Witnesses say two waves about five feet high each hit the west side of the Solomon Islands following an 8.0 magnitude earthquake, resulting in fatalities. TODAY's Al Roker reports.

    By Becky Bratu and Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    Updated at 9:40 a.m. ET: At least five people were killed on Wednesday after a strong earthquake in the South Pacific generated a 3 foot tsunami that aid workers said washed away homes and wiped out remote island communities.

    A tidal surge moved houses by up to 30 feet, and there were reports of people and fishing boats being washed out to sea, according to local volunteers for humanitarian charity, World Vision.

    The magnitude 8.0 quake struck Wednesday about 3 miles under the Santa Cruz Islands, a thinly-populated part of the Solomon Islands that lie east of Papua New Guinea and northeast of Australia, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

    A 3 foot wave hit near the town of Lata, swamping some villages and the town's main airport as people fled to safety on higher ground, Reuters reported.

    There was no tsunami threat to Hawaii, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said. 

    According to Reuters, Lata hospital's director of nursing, Augustine Pilve, told New Zealand television that five people had been killed, including a boy aged about ten. Pilve added that more casualties were possible as officials were making their way to villages that may have been hit.

    It was not immediately clear if the deaths were caused by the tremor or the tidal surge.

    World Vision said two communities in the province of Temotu had been "almost entirely wiped out by a one metre sea surge."

    In the town of Venga, with a population of about 750, the surge shifted homes by up to 30 feet, damaging around 90 percent of them, the charity added. Nela, with a population of almost 200 people, saw 95 percent of its homes washed away, the charity said.

    "I am currently walking through one community [in Lata], and I'm knee-deep in water," Jeremiah Tabua, World Vision's emergency response coordinator in the Solomon Islands, said in a statement released by the charity. "I can see a number of houses that have been swept away by the surge."

    Solomon Islands police commissioner John Lansley told Australian Broadcasting Corporation that the worst hit area was around Lata.

    "We understand a part of the airstrip has been damaged, which is going to cause some issues in respect to getting relief aid out there, but that is being assessed at this moment," he said.

    The quake struck at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday local time (8:23 p.m. Tuesday ET) and was followed by dozens of aftershocks including a 6.3 magnitude tremor at 5:35 p.m. local time (1:35 a.m. ET) Wednesday. A magnitude-6.0 quake struck at 12:55 a.m. Thursday local time.

    USGS officials said the later shocks were "not at all surprising."

    The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued and later cancelled a tsunami warning for the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati, Wallis and Futana.

    A tsunami watch was issued and later cancelled for Samoa, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia and Guam. 

     

    126 comments

    Wouldn't it be a great idea if this so called "news" story had a time and date mentioned somewhere ?

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    Explore related topics: weather, world, earthquake, pacific, life, tsunami, australia, usgs, featured, solomon-islands
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    10:58am, EST

    Caught on camera: Teen's dramatic rescue from floodwater torrent in Australia

    An impulsive swim with a friend in a flooded Queensland creek left a 14-year-old by desperately clinging to a tree until police and firefighters were able to reach him and pull him from raging floodwaters. NBC's Sara James reports.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A teenage boy left clinging to a tree in a raging torrent of floodwater in Australia was pulled to safety in a dramatic rescue Friday.

    As the teen was being brought to dry land – in scenes caught on video — the emergency worker who saved him was swept away by the churning mass of brown water in Rockhampton, Queensland.


    The rescuer went under a nearby bridge but managed to reach safety moments later.

    The AFP news agency reported that in total there were 20 water rescues across Queensland state Thursday night and early Friday, including a woman and two children trapped in a car and seven people in two flooded houses.

    Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said nearly a foot of rain had fallen in Yeppoon, north of Rockhampton, since early Thursday, the AFP reported. The area is being hit by the remains of tropical cyclone Oswald.

    One rescuer told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that the boy rescued in Rockhampton was lucky to be alive. “The current was so strong, it just took him away,” Brett Williams said.

    In the video of the rescue, the boy is seen holding onto a tree amid the rushing waters.

    A rescuer goes out to him and a yellow rope is seen in the water.

    The two then let go of the tree and make their way to land, at times appearing to be engulfed by the waters.

    'He's good, he's good'
    But, as the rescuer in the water tries to transfer the teen to others on the land, he is suddenly swept away.

    “He’s going under the bridge,” a voice is heard saying.

    Other rescuers run after him, and moment later one is heard saying, “He’s good, he’s good.”

    The Australian broadcaster reported that “huge rainfall totals” were expected over the weekend as Oswald tracks south, with Queensland Premier Campbell Newman warning that the state’s largest city Brisbane could be hit by flooding.

    AFP said 30 people were killed and more than 2.5 million people were affected by floods in Queensland two years ago.

    Related:

    Half world's iron ore trade halted by storm in Australia's 'cyclone alley'

    11 comments

    and the video is where?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, rescue, australia, flood, featured, queensland, rockhampton
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