See tornado touch down in El Reno, OK
The National Weather
Service warned a "confirmed and extremely dangerous tornado" was near
the city of Harvester, about 25 miles northwest of St. Louis.
There were no immediate
reports of catastrophic damage or major injuries in the St. Louis area,
said Jeff Rainford, the chief of staff for Mayor Francis Slay.
Lambert-St. Louis International Airport was closed because of the severe
weather, and minor damage was reported to a terminal, he said.
As authorities in
Missouri urged people to take shelter, officials in Oklahoma were
working to determine how many people had been killed and injured in the
storm that battered the state's largest city.
Watch as tornado nears ground in OK
A mother and a child were among five people killed as a result of severe weather, and another 14 were injured, authorities said.
At the height of the
storm, the National Weather Service issued a tornado emergency for a
number of areas in and around Oklahoma's capital city, with tornadoes
reported outside Moore, near the suburb of Bethany, north of Union City
and outside Tinker Air Force Base.
Parts of Interstates 35
and 40, which cut through Oklahoma City and Moore, were "a parking lot,"
the weather service said, warning that those caught in the heavy rush
hour traffic "are in danger."
"We've got a nightmare situation going on right now," Betsy Randolph, a state Highway Patrol spokeswoman, told CNN.
"They are essentially sitting ducks on the interstate."
Overturned big rigs and cars littered portions of the roadway, and thousands more were believed to be stuck in the traffic.
"My biggest concern right now is the traffic that is out on the highway right now," Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin said.
She said she has called
out the National Guard, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol and the state Office
of Emergency Management to "try to get the traffic moving" and get
people to shelter.
The weather service issued the tornado emergency for Oklahoma City as well as its suburbs of Moore, Yukon and Bethany.
Oklahoma City's Will
Rogers World Airport was evacuated over the threat from the approaching
tornado, and travelers were sheltered in the airport's basement at the
height of the storm, authorities said.
"They are now in the
process of slowly allowing people out of their shelter. They are
bringing employees up now, and then the passengers will be able to come
up once the terminal is properly staffed," said Karen Carney, a
spokeswoman for the airport.
"Right now, the airport
has no power. Without power, they probably will not be able to allow
passengers into the secure areas of the airport. But they obviously
can't allow any takeoffs and landings without power, either."
Even those in the
National Weather Center -- a building on the University of Oklahoma
campus with tenants that include the National Severe Storms Laboratory
and NOAA's Storm Prediction Center -- "have been urged to stay away from
windows due to potential for 80-90 mph winds," according to a tweet
from weather service's Norman office, which also is based in the
building.
Police and firefighters
were responding to reports of damage in El Reno, just outside Union
City, but it was not immediately known how bad the damage was, Mayor
Matt White said.
Authorities were urging
people in the path of the tornado to take immediate cover, and Fallin
was urging residents not to take any risks.
In Moore, where a
massive tornado leveled much of the city this month, Mayor Glenn Lewis
said it was unimaginable that the city was in the path of another
tornado.
A reported tornado moved
four miles northwest of Moore, according to the National Weather
Service forecasters and storm spotters.
The storm was so fierce
that the Weather Channel's Mike Bettes, known for his on-the-ground
severe weather reports, said his Tornado Hunt vehicle was thrown about
200 yards.
"Airbags deployed. All are safe," Bettes said in a post on Twitter.
More than 50,000
customers were without power by early Friday evening in the Oklahoma
City area because of severe weather, the Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co.
said.
More than half the city of Mustang, 17 miles south of Oklahoma City, was without power, Mustang Fire Chief Roy Widmann said.
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