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At Least Five Killed as Hurricane Helene Slams into Florida, Georgia

At least five people have been killed as Hurricane Helene slammed into the southeast United States, bringing dangerous winds, widespread damage and power outages.

Helene weakened to a Category 1 hurricane early on Friday with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph), according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC), but it left a deadly trail of destruction in both states.

More than 55 million people in the US have been placed under some form of weather alert.

According to reports, three deaths in Georgia and Florida confirmed one death, after a sign fell on a car on a highway in Tampa City. Emergency responders in North Carolina also said one person had died when a tree fell on a home.

The hurricane made landfall in northwestern Florida as a Category 4 storm as forecasters warned that the enormous system could create a “nightmare” storm surge and bring dangerous winds and rain across much of the southeastern US.

Helene was moving rapidly inland after making landfall, with the risk of tornadoes continuing in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and southern North Carolina, forecasters said.

Helene continues to produce catastrophic winds that are now pushing into southern Georgia,” the NHC said in an update on Friday. “Persons should not leave their shelters and remain in place through the passage of these life-threatening conditions.”

Florida state authorities provided buses to evacuate people from the Big Bend area, home to about 832,000 people, and taking them to shelters in the state capital, Tallahassee.

Officials in Florida urged residents to heed mandatory evacuation orders or face life-threatening conditions ahead of the hurricane’s landfall.

“EVERYONE along the Florida Big Bend coast is at risk of potentially catastrophic storm surge,” the NHC said on social media.

States of emergency were also declared in Virginia and Alabama, as the NHC warned that much of the southeast could experience power outages, toppled trees and intense flooding

In the southern Appalachian Mountains, the National Weather Service has warned the region could be hit with landslides and flooding not seen in more than a century.

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Comfort Samuel

I work with TV360 Nigeria, as a broadcast journalist, producer and reporter. I'm so passionate on what I do.

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