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Dublin: 18 °C Wednesday 19 June, 2013

Superstorm Sandy: At least 92 dead across 15 US states

More bodies are being found as police and firefighters search areas hit by the superstorm. The overall death toll is 163 people.

Beth Skudin, right, hugs a neighbor outside her home that was flooded by Superstorm Sandy, Thursday, Nov 1, 2012, in Long Beach, N.Y.
Beth Skudin, right, hugs a neighbor outside her home that was flooded by Superstorm Sandy, Thursday, Nov 1, 2012, in Long Beach, N.Y.
Image: Kathy Kmonicek/AP/Press Association Images

SUPERSTORM SANDY’S US victims struggle to adjust to gas lines, power outages and temporary housing while the death toll from the monster cyclone approaches 100.

New York’s famed subway lurched back to life with limited service Thursday, offering some relief from the storm-battered city’s gridlock, but East Coast residents faced long lines at filling stations and lingering blackouts.

At least 92 people have now been reported dead across the 15 states hit by Monday night’s unprecedented storm, including 40 in New York City, while some economists have estimated the disaster will cost up to $50 billion.

More bodies are being found as police and firefighters continue “their lifesaving mission, going block-by-block and door-to-door in the areas devastated by the hurricane,” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Thursday.

Superstorm Sandy

Long Beach, NY (Kathy Kmonicek/AP/Press Association Images)

With about 650,000 people still without power in New York, Bloomberg said the city would start handing out food and water, while National Guard officers and police would go into high-rise buildings to help the elderly.

The Con Edison power company said some New Yorkers would have to wait until November 11 before electricity is restored, and the National Guard was still rescuing people trapped in flooded homes in nearby Hoboken, New Jersey.

The floodwaters receded slowly, leaving scenes of desolation. A yacht, thrown up by the storm, blocked one street near the Hoboken ferry terminal.

New Jersey

New Jersey, which President Barack Obama visited on Wednesday, saw the most widespread destruction, with entire communities along the coast flooded and some 1.8 million people still without power days after the storm.

Obama and Republican White House challenger Mitt Romney resumed full campaigning on Thursday five days out from a nailbiter election, although the tone of their attacks was more muted in the aftermath of the tragedy.

As he launched an ambitious swing through four vital battleground states, Obama took the time to call the governors of worst-hit states New York, New Jersey and Connecticut from aboard Air Force One, the White House said.

Meanwhile, the first subway trains brought some cheer to New York City.

A skeleton service started just before dawn and trains were quickly packed. Train rides were to be free on Thursday and Friday. In a bid to avoid traffic gridlock, Bloomberg said that until Friday cars entering Manhattan must carry at least three people. Police set up checkpoints at bridges and turned back hundreds of vehicles.

Superstorm Sandy Energy

People wait in line to fill containers with gas at a Shell filling station in Keyport, New Jersey (Mel Evans/AP/Press Association Images)

Some heartbreaking stories have emerged from the storm.

Two brothers, aged two and four, were swept from their mother’s arms in the floods as the family tried to escape the rising seas in the New York City borough of Staten Island.

Glenda Moore’s car became stuck in the water, and she was carrying the boys to seek help when they were swept away, the New York Post said. The boys, Connor aged four and Brandon aged two, were later found dead.

Many victims were electrocuted or drowned in flooded basements, while others died from poisoning from the fumes given off by diesel generators put into use since the storm.

The Shell oil company was meanwhile working to clean up a diesel spill off the coast of New York City estimated at up to 300,000 gallons (1.1 million liters), according to the company and the US Coast Guard. New York police said 28 people had been detained for looting in the Coney Island and Rockaway Beach districts.

Hurricane Sandy brought devastation throughout the Caribbean, hitting Haiti and Cuba especially hard before slamming into the United States and Canada. The overall death toll is now at least 163.

On Thursday the Coast Guard called off the search for the missing captain of a replica of the 18th-century HMS Bounty merchant vessel, which went down in high seas off the Carolinas in the opening hours of the storm’s onslaught.

- © AFP, 2012

PHOTOS: Fuel shortages and traffic jams as New York tries to get back to normal>

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Comments (21 Comments)

  • mattoid 02/11/12 #

    The commenters who said last week it was all media hype and alarmism have gone strangely quiet.

    Thoughts go out to all who have lost loved ones or had their homes destroyed.

    Reply
  • Here we go again. Are you really that interested in Cuba & Haiti, or do you just want a dig at “Big Bad America”. Maybe The Journal is covering this disaster in America as it affects a lot of us Irish living here, & there aren’t so many of us in Cuba or Haiti…

    Reply
    • Ah that’s ok then – let them drown so! Just so long as none of us or our relatives are affected!

      Reply
    • 4,722 viewed the story “Hurricane Sandy kill 21 in Carribbean”. 13,894 + 2,796 (so far) viewed the reports on The Hurricanes impact on New York. So obviously there’s more interest in those reports from Journal readers. No-ones saying the lives lost in the Caribbean are less important, but the disrespectful comments on regular American peoples suffering is embarresing. People with relatives living over here, may appreciate the coverage.

      Reply
    • Reading the british/ irish coverage of the storm,no where else has such an anti american response as here in the journal.maybe its just the few people in ireland that have no connection with america.

      Reply
    • I totally agree Mickey and Paul. The anti American sentiment on this website is shocking. I live in NY and I’m witnessing what’s happening here. Of course any loss of life is terrible but this constant “what about Haiti” thing is getting old

      Reply
  • When the carribean gets hit by storms every year its the American red cross, military and other agency’s that are the first to rush in and help them.After the eathquake in Haiti, it is still the americans that are helping them rebuild when everyone else left.What does dopey Ireland do..Donates 4mill to some war lord in Uganda.Most of the people affected by Sandy are poor black,hispanic and white people.

    Reply
  • Probably a stupid question but what does ‘AFP’ stand for?

    Reply
    • Agence France-Presse – otherwise known as “One of the news agencies TheJournal rely on to write their stories for them”
      http://www.afp.com/en/home

      Reply
    • You’re a bit off the mark there, Me Myself. We use stories from AFP when it’s something we can’t cover ourselves – most often, this will be stories happening abroad. So, for example, we can’t report on Syria because we don’t have a reporter there, but we can have a wire piece from AFP or Associated Press who are both trusted news sources who have a strong reputation for being able to get news from the ground. We pay for this service and we’re happy to do it, because it’s invaluable for our news coverage.

      It’s exactly the same for every other news organisation. Open up the Guardian, the Irish Times, the New York Times or whatever national newspaper you have to hand, and you’ll see that a significant number of articles every single day will come from new agencies such as AFP, AP, Reuters, etc. That’s what they’re there for, and they provide a valuable service. Without them, newspapers (and ourselves) would be limited and wouldn’t be able to provide coverage of major news stories.

      Reply
    • Thanks :) Didn’t mean to cause a row…

      Reply
    • Ha, you’re fine! I just wanted to clear things up because that comment from Me Myself was pretty misleading (they were right about what AFP stands for though!).

      Reply
  • and what about the 69 people dead between Haiti, Cuba and the Caribbean… they aren’t talking about them…

    Reply
    • Tara, when the earthquake hit Haiti everybody everywhere was talking about it! I’m sure the newspapers and media in Haiti and Cuba are talking about it there.

      Reply
    • Xadovan 02/11/12 #

      Take a guess………………

      Hurricane Sandy strikes Cuba, Jamaica
      4,731 Views

      Hurricane Sandy kills 21 in Caribbean, takes aim at US
      4,718 Views

      Hurricane Sandy death toll rises to 38 in Caribbean
      3,767 Views

      New York: Thousands evacuated, subways closed down in advance of massive storm
      25,609 Views

      ‘Don’t be stupid. Get out.’ – Mass shut down as Sandy approaches US
      17,445 Views

      Superstorm Sandy: Batters US east coast, at least 16 dead
      13,497 Views

      PHOTOS: Fuel shortages and traffic jams as New York tries to get back to normal
      13,566 Views

      PHOTOS: Fuel shortages and traffic jams as New York tries to get back to normal
      13,566 Views

      Reply
  • Most of them were killed outside,
    y go outside wen the biggest hurricane in your history is there just baffles me ??

    Reply
  • Very anti American newspaper with some nasty comments

    Reply
  • To whom it may concern, please stop calling this a “Superstorm” as it is
    actually fairly mild compared to many other storms. I don’t remember Hurricane Katrina being referred to as a “Superstorm” yet it was far more devistating than this one.

    Reply

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