After a powerful tornado leveled parts of West and Central Mississippi Friday night, state and local rescuers are coordinating aid efforts for the hardest hit towns.
In what state meteorologist Lance Perrilloux called a "very rare event,” the tornado covered about 170 miles and lasted for more than an hour. It struck Rolling Fork just after 8 p.m. on Friday before damaging several other towns in the Delta on a path toward Alabama.
In a tweet Saturday morning, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) confirmed 23 people are dead, dozens are injured and at least four people are missing, but “unfortunately, these numbers are expected to change.” At least one person also died during the storms in Alabama after being trapped under a mobile home that flipped overnight.
Anna Guizerix, managing editor for the Vicksburg Post, said staff started calling people in nearby Rolling Fork and other damaged towns overnight as the devastation became clear.
“We stayed up overnight and tried to find out any information we could,” she said.
As information trickled in on Saturday, she said the tornado took people by surprise.
“There was one restaurant, people were eating inside. They were finishing up their dinner and they heard the roaring of the tornado. And the owner rushed everybody into the walk-in cooler and the restaurant was destroyed,” she said. “Everybody in the cooler was saved.”
Late Friday and early Saturday morning, video footage on social media and in news outlets across the Gulf South trickled in showing widespread damage, downed power lines and reports of people trapped in their homes and vehicles.