Rescuers in the US state of Kentucky are intensifying their search for victims of the floods that devastated the eastern state and killed at least 28 people in light of bad weather, the state’s governor said Sunday.
An earlier toll had indicated that there were 26 dead. The governor announced earlier that the number of victims is likely to rise.
Some mountainous areas remain inaccessible following the floods that turned a number of roads into rivers, broke bridges and swept away homes. Rescue efforts are also complicated by poor mobile phone service.
Governor Andy Beshear told CNN:NBC“These floods are among the most devastating and fatal that we have witnessed in our history…and rain is falling while we are trying to continue our search operations.”
“We will go from house to house to find as many people as possible. We will work even in the rain. But the weather is complicating the situation,” he added.
“We’ll be finding bodies over a period of weeks, many of them shoveled up to meters away, perhaps more than a quarter of a mile from where they went missing,” he said.
The floods hit an area in the state that was mainly suffering from poverty, due to the decline in the coal sector, which was the backbone of its economy.
Beshear said that the floods “swept away areas where the inhabitants did not originally own much.”
Some areas of eastern Kentucky recorded more than 20 centimeters of rain in 24 hours.
The water level on the north branch of the Kentucky River in Whitsburg rose to 20 feet in a matter of hours, well above the previous record level of 14.7 feet.
And the Weather Prediction Center of the National Weather Service warned Sunday of the possibility of flooding in part of the United States, including central and eastern Kentucky.
“The risk of flash floods will increase during the day as heavy rains and thunderstorms develop and expand,” he said on Twitter.
US President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency in Kentucky due to the floods, allowing the allocation of federal aid to complement the state’s local rescue efforts.