Text Only
Search

Hurricane Ike Pounds Texas, Moves Northward

13 September 2008

Flood waters from Hurricane Ike inundate the town of Clear Lake Shores, Texas, 13 Sep 2008
Flood waters from Hurricane Ike inundate the town of Clear Lake Shores, Texas, 13 Sep 2008
Hurricane Ike has swept through the southern U.S. state of Texas, flooding homes and businesses, knocking out electricity to hundreds of thousands, and cutting a path of destruction all the way up to Houston - the nation's fourth-largest city.

More than three million people are reported to be without power from Houston to Galveston on the Texas Gulf of Mexico coast.  Officials say it may take weeks to completely restore electricity.

Authorities are beginning search and rescue operations in hard-hit areas.  The massive storm had prevented them from responding to thousands of emergency calls overnight into this Saturday morning. 

They said they are particularly concerned about the safety of thousands of people who defied evacuation orders in Galveston and the surrounding area, where the storm first made landfall.

Large sections of Galveston were left underwater from massive flooding.  Winds of more than 175 kilometers per hour also knocked out power lines, and spawned fires that officials had to let burn.

President Bush talks about Hurricane Ike at the White House in Washington, 13 Sep 2008<br />
President Bush talks about Hurricane Ike at the White House in Washington, 13 Sep 2008
U.S. President George Bush called Hurricane Ike a "huge storm" that is causing great damage.  In a statement at the White House this morning, he said he is sending Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff to the Gulf Coast region to assist officials with the recovery effort.

Mr. Bush also announced that his administration had extended environmental waivers on imported gasoline, in order to offset the disruption of U.S. fuel facilities in the Gulf of Mexico.

Gasoline prices have gone up across the country because of concerns about possible supply shortages.

Hurricane Ike is still bringing heavy wind and rains to the Houston area, but is expected to weaken as it continues moving farther inland to the north and east.


Some information for this report was provided by AFP and AP.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Bush Says Ike Still Dangerous
Hurricane Ike Begins Pounding Texas Coast
Hurricanes Need Right Mix to Form
 
  Top Story
Iranian Opposition Protesters Hijack Government Rally

  More Stories
Clinton Tries to Reassure Arab Leaders on Israeli Settlements
British Leader Vows Afghan Mission Unchanged  Audio Clip Available
Afghanistan's Abdullah Says Karzai Re-election Lacks Legitimacy
Republicans Gain in US State Elections  Audio Clip Available
US Envoy Urges Burma to Make Concrete Steps Toward Democracy
Italian Judge Convicts 23 in CIA Kidnap Case
Israel Seizes Ship Loaded With Weapons  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Army: Troops Reach Key Taliban Strongholds
India Denies Support to Pakistan Insurgents
Indonesia Debates Benefits, Risks of Carbon-Trading Plans
Australian Oil Spill Stemmed After 10 Weeks
Africa Boycott Steers UN Climate Talks  Audio Clip Available
ICC Prosecutor Faces Uphill Challenges in Kenya Case