Berliner Boersenzeitung - US rescuers search for missing girls in deadly Texas flash floods

EUR -
AED 4.302842
AFN 79.988996
ALL 97.295357
AMD 449.496115
ANG 2.096669
AOA 1074.270892
ARS 1542.554451
AUD 1.787174
AWG 2.108711
AZN 1.994775
BAM 1.956754
BBD 2.366783
BDT 142.429437
BGN 1.955484
BHD 0.441666
BIF 3495.634019
BMD 1.171506
BND 1.500387
BOB 8.100018
BRL 6.312102
BSD 1.172236
BTN 102.507849
BWP 15.644293
BYN 3.875974
BYR 22961.520127
BZD 2.354668
CAD 1.611565
CDF 3385.653172
CHF 0.941185
CLF 0.0285
CLP 1117.956903
CNY 8.410473
CNH 8.409516
COP 4709.185192
CRC 592.871322
CUC 1.171506
CUP 31.044912
CVE 110.318782
CZK 24.471603
DJF 208.737308
DKK 7.462652
DOP 71.624918
DZD 152.035978
EGP 56.618843
ERN 17.572592
ETB 164.179842
FJD 2.632081
FKP 0.867307
GBP 0.863031
GEL 3.157207
GGP 0.867307
GHS 12.349384
GIP 0.867307
GMD 84.934193
GNF 10164.890962
GTQ 8.991115
GYD 245.241139
HKD 9.196329
HNL 30.729982
HRK 7.533136
HTG 153.440218
HUF 395.465457
IDR 18898.206549
ILS 3.971312
IMP 0.867307
INR 102.419433
IQD 1535.648952
IRR 49349.695449
ISK 142.958836
JEP 0.867307
JMD 187.861586
JOD 0.830587
JPY 172.542059
KES 151.452048
KGS 102.331051
KHR 4694.359167
KMF 493.789581
KPW 1054.282337
KRW 1614.603432
KWD 0.357849
KYD 0.976856
KZT 630.82289
LAK 25378.277118
LBP 104933.967605
LKR 352.691963
LRD 235.02254
LSL 20.737801
LTL 3.459153
LVL 0.708632
LYD 6.369105
MAD 10.559348
MDL 19.570124
MGA 5169.590424
MKD 61.749588
MMK 2459.266979
MNT 4213.193023
MOP 9.477735
MRU 46.783808
MUR 53.221526
MVR 18.037925
MWK 2032.686411
MXN 21.718247
MYR 4.92911
MZN 74.929531
NAD 20.737801
NGN 1798.226279
NIO 43.141033
NOK 11.944706
NPR 164.01236
NZD 1.957077
OMR 0.450427
PAB 1.171506
PEN 4.131513
PGK 4.948413
PHP 66.326585
PKR 332.664687
PLN 4.257455
PYG 8780.244627
QAR 4.274785
RON 5.060089
RSD 117.120174
RUB 93.365816
RWF 1696.194288
SAR 4.395499
SBD 9.642189
SCR 17.272426
SDG 703.489128
SEK 11.157735
SGD 1.499264
SHP 0.92062
SLE 27.177033
SLL 24565.896027
SOS 669.937247
SRD 43.836005
STD 24247.811607
STN 24.511218
SVC 10.257
SYP 15231.864138
SZL 20.733078
THB 37.824714
TJS 10.930509
TMT 4.111987
TND 3.446781
TOP 2.820706
TRY 47.73078
TTD 7.960643
TWD 35.089538
TZS 3045.915955
UAH 48.670728
UGX 4170.895348
USD 1.171506
UYU 46.942886
UZS 14664.110781
VES 155.520411
VND 30795.967364
VUV 140.053656
WST 3.11401
XAF 655.699054
XAG 0.030383
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.166054
XCG 2.112648
XDR 0.822792
XOF 655.699054
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.483577
ZAR 20.514185
ZMK 10544.963998
ZMW 26.990389
ZWL 377.224496
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    14.95

    +1%

  • SCS

    0.2600

    16.45

    +1.58%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    47.6

    -0.48%

  • CMSC

    0.0390

    23.119

    +0.17%

  • RIO

    0.5850

    63.685

    +0.92%

  • VOD

    0.1080

    11.648

    +0.93%

  • BCC

    1.4400

    85.7

    +1.68%

  • GSK

    0.8950

    39.115

    +2.29%

  • BCE

    0.3000

    24.8

    +1.21%

  • JRI

    0.0450

    13.425

    +0.34%

  • CMSD

    0.1110

    23.671

    +0.47%

  • AZN

    2.0550

    77.395

    +2.66%

  • BP

    0.0700

    34.14

    +0.21%

  • BTI

    -0.8750

    57.045

    -1.53%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    70.55

    +0.38%

US rescuers search for missing girls in deadly Texas flash floods
US rescuers search for missing girls in deadly Texas flash floods / Photo: RONALDO SCHEMIDT - AFP

US rescuers search for missing girls in deadly Texas flash floods

Rescuers were on Saturday searching for more than 20 girls missing from a riverside summer camp in the US state of Texas, after torrential rains caused devastating flooding that killed 24 people -- with more rain on the way.

Text size:

"At this point we're at about 24 fatalities," Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha told an evening press conference on Friday, as rescue teams scrambled to locate stranded residents in the south-central Texas region.

Some of the dead were children, Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said at a previous news conference.

On Saturday, the National Weather Service warned of more extremely heavy rain and "locally catastrophic" flash flooding to come in the region, located northwest of San Antonio.

"Flash flooding is already occurring," the NWS said in an alert, calling on residents to move to higher ground, and to "act quickly to protect your life."

In Kerrville on Saturday, the usually calm Guadalupe River was flowing fast, its murky waters filled with debris.

"It rained in a day what it usually rains in a year," said local resident Gerardo Martinez, 61.

"The water reached the top of the trees. About ten meters or so," he added. "Cars, whole houses were going down the river. That was pretty bad."

- 'Still missing' -

Friday saw a massive rescue operation launched, with around 500 personnel and 14 helicopters helping in the search for survivors.

Texas military official Major General Thomas Suelzer told reporters at least 237 people had been rescued or evacuated by emergency personnel, with 167 rescues performed using helicopters.

On Friday evening, the county sheriff said as many as 25 children from the Camp Mystic Christian summer camp in the flooded Kerr County were missing.

Lieutenant Governor Patrick put the number of missing children at "about 23."

On Saturday, US media reported that two of the missing girls were dead, citing their families.

The Heart O' The Hills summer camp, located about a mile away from Camp Mystic, confirmed on Saturday that its director Jane Ragsdale was among the dead.

They were among the roughly 750 children at Camp Mystic, a girls summer camp along the banks of the Guadalupe River, which rose 26 feet (eight meters) in 45 minutes with heavy rainfall overnight.

"That does not mean they've been lost, they could be in a tree, they could be out of communication," Patrick said.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has signed a disaster declaration to boost resources for counties in the region, and President Donald Trump has promised federal support.

Vice President JD Vance on Saturday described the disaster as "an incomprehensible tragedy."

- 'Mass casualty event' -

Freeman Martin, director of the state's public safety department, said continuing heavy rain had made conditions challenging for rescuers.

Martin called the disaster a "mass casualty event."

State and local officials warned against residents traveling to the area which includes camp grounds dotted along the river, with dozens of roads impassable.

Videos on social media showed houses and trees swept away by the flash flood caused by heavy overnight rain of up to 12 inches -- one-third of Kerr County's average annual rainfall.

Governor Abbott shared a video on X of a victim being plucked from the top of a tree by a rescuer dangling from a helicopter, as floodwaters raged below.

The Texas National Guard sent rescue teams and the US Coast Guard joined efforts as well.

- 'Another wave' -

Kerr County officials have repeatedly said they were unaware of an impending flood overnight from Thursday to Friday.

"We didn't know this flood was coming," Kerr County judge Rob Kelly said on Friday, adding that the region has "floods all the time."

"This is the most dangerous river valley in the United States," he added, referring to the Guadalupe River.

Soila Reyna, 55, a Kerrville resident who works at a local church helping people who lost their belongings, witnessed the devastation unfold.

"It has been years since we had a flood, but nothing like this," Reyna said.

"Nothing like as catastrophic as this, where it involved children, people and just the loss of people's houses and you know, it's just crazy," she added.

Flash floods, which occur when the ground is unable to absorb torrential rainfall, are not unusual.

But scientists say in recent years human-driven climate change has made extreme weather events like floods, droughts and heat waves more frequent and intense.

In Kerrville, Martinez said Friday's flooding was some of the worst he had ever seen.

"There is a saying here that there's a flood every hundred years," he said. "We had it. We've never seen anything like that and hopefully we won't ever see it again."

burs-aha/dw

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)