Tornado kills three in France

Tornado kills three in France

4.08.2008

A FREAK tornado has ripped through northern France, killing three people and injuring nine as it gutted houses and hurled cars through the air.

Packing violent winds and lashing rain, the flash storm tore across a 10km swathe late yesterday, destroying some 40 homes in the space of minutes in Hautmont, the worst-hit of the four towns on its path.

"There was a deep roaring sound, like a bomb raid,`` said Hautmont resident Erick Filleur, who was jolted out of his sleep by the storm.

"My wife was watching television. Then suddenly my daughter cried out, my shutters exploded and part of our roof flew off.``

A woman in her 70s was killed when her house caved in, medics said, while rescue workers today pulled the bodies of the deputy mayor of Hautmont and his wife from the rubble of their home.

"The windows of my apartment suddenly blew up. I lay down on the ground, I just thought I was going to die,`` said Mustapha Rbide, another of the town`s 16,000 residents.

His neighbour Samia Sayah said her baby`s crib was sent flying around the bedroom by the force of the wind, although the seven-month-old child was unharmed.

Torn metal sheets, ripped electricity wires, roof tiles, gravel and bricks littered the town`s two worst-hit streets, as 200 rescue workers with sniffer dogs combed the debris for possible victims.

Red Cross volunteers were handing out hot drinks and biscuits, blankets and clothes as shocked residents wandered through the streets, snapping pictures of the devastation with their mobile phones.

Of the nine injured, the two most seriously hurt were in the nearby town of Boussieres-sur-Sambre, as their house was reduced to rubble.

Four elderly people were also taken to hospital for observation after the storm struck a retirement home in Hautmont.

The hospital roof in nearby Maubeuge was also damaged.

Local rail traffic was also cut after the storm, which struck at around 11pm (0700 AEST), brought down local power lines, according to French rail operator SNCF.

Several dozen elderly residents and a few families spent the night huddled in a local community centre turned into a makeshift shelter.

A handful of distraught residents, shocked and some of them injured, were still sheltering there today.

Andree Fouquet, 61, her arm in a sling and both hands in bandages from glass cuts, took refuge there with her 81-year-old mother and 82-year-old aunt, whose house was entirely destroyed.

"You work your whole life, and everything is gone in a few seconds,`` she said, surveying the devastation.

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