
Residents cling to rope as Texas floodwater surges around them
Devastating flash floods struck central Texas over the 4th of July weekend, primarily affecting the San Antonio and Austin areas, with significant flooding reported around the Guadalupe and Colorado Rivers.
Footage captures the dramatic rescue efforts in Tom Green County, near San Angelo, on Friday (4 July), as locals fed a rope to residents caught in a powerful current.
A group of people wearing life jackets can be seen pulling a trapped resident from the water as onlookers shout: 'Pull!'
At least 104 people have been killed following the torrential downpours.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
an hour ago
- Sky News
Bad weather hits efforts to rescue 'seriously injured' double Olympic champion Laura Dahlmeier
Rescuers are being hampered by poor weather during attempts to reach two-time Olympic gold medallist Laura Dahlmeier, who has "sustained serious injuries" on a mountain in northern Pakistan. Ms Dahlmeier has been stranded on the Laila Peak in the Karakoram mountain range since Monday. Military helicopters have been unable to set off due to low visibility and rainfall, said Faizullah Faraq, a spokesman for the regional Gilgit-Baltistan government. The 31-year-old German, who won gold in the sprint and pursuit biathlon events at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, was struck by falling rocks. Ms Dahlmeier, who also won the 2017 women's biathlon World Cup, was injured at an altitude of about 18,700ft on Monday at noon local time, according to her management team in Germany. "There is still no clarity on her condition," Alpine Club Of Pakistan vice president Karrar Haidri told the Associated Press. "She sustained serious injuries, but she has oxygen with her, and injured climbers have been known to survive for days." The authorities launched the rescue mission after receiving a distress signal on Monday from Ms Dahlmeier's climbing partner, Marina Eva, who managed to descend to base camp with help from rescuers the following day. Rescue efforts resumed on Wednesday but no further updates have yet been provided. Other climbers, including two Americans who have been attempting the same ascent, are trying to join the rescue operation. Ms Dahlmeier will be taken to the city of Skardu when she is rescued, officials said.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Russia earthquake: China and Taiwan issue tsunami warnings after almost a million evacuated in Japan
China's eastern coast braced for rising waves on Wednesday after authorities issued a tsunami warning in the wake of a massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake off Russia 's Kamchatka Peninsula earlier in the day. The quake, one of the strongest ever recorded, hit at a depth of 20.7km and was centred about 119km east-southeast of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, seismological agencies confirmed. China's Tsunami Warning Centre said waves between 30cm and one metre were expected to reach parts of the country's eastern coastline by evening, including densely populated regions such as Shanghai. The natural resources ministry raised a "yellow tsunami alert", signalling moderate risk, and cautioned people in affected areas to avoid beaches, harbours, and low-lying coastal districts through the evening. The alert for Shanghai and Zhejiang was lifted in the afternoon, however. Emergency services were deployed in anticipation of potential flooding and to assist with possible evacuations. Local authorities issued instructions urging people to move to higher ground while maritime operations in some ports were temporarily suspended. No casualties or significant property damage had been reported in China as of late Wednesday morning. The tsunami threat came the same day as Typhoon Co-May made landfall in Zhejiang province at around 4:30am local time, delivering strong winds of up to 83kmph and torrential rain. Authorities had already relocated more than 280,000 people in Shanghai and surrounding regions. Hundreds of flights and ferry operations had been cancelled and speed limits imposed across roads and railways. Ports and public attractions were temporarily shut as Shanghai braced for additional impacts, with forecasters warning of another possible landfall closer to the financial hub later in the day. The storm brought heavy rainfall and localised flooding to the port city of Zhoushan, prompting emergency management officials to raise the response status to 'Level III' as some urban districts and coastal villages saw waterlogging and power outages. The earthquake also triggered tsunami warnings and precautionary measures in Taiwan as well as the Philippines, Indonesia, and other Pacific Rim nations and territories from Russia to the US and Peru. Japan 's Meteorological Agency said that tsunami waves of up to 3m could reach large coastal areas in the northern Pacific, though initial assessments suggested only small surges outside the epicentral region. Japan evacuated more than a million residents across 133 municipalities along its Pacific coast as the meteorological agency issued advisories. The Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, said all workers had been evacuated, adding that there were no abnormalities reported so far. The power plant suffered a nuclear meltdown in 2011 following an earthquake and tsunami disaster. In the US, tsunami warnings and watches were activated for the Hawaiian archipelago, vast stretches of Alaska's coastline, and the Pacific coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington states. Authorities in Hawaii and Alaska advised residents to take urgent action to protect life and property.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Beijing floods: 30 killed as China sees summer of extreme weather
At least 30 people have died in Beijing and more than 80,000 were evacuated to safety, Chinese authorities said, as heavy rains and floods ravage roads and houses in northern other people died after a landslide on Monday in Chengde city, about three hours northeast of is dealing with a summer of extreme weather. Record heatwaves hit the country's eastern region earlier this month while floods swept the country's the backdrop of the massive floods in northern China, President Xi Jinping has called for "all-out" rescue efforts and told authorities to prepare for "worst-case and extreme scenarios". "No effort should be spared to search for and rescue those missing or trapped, to transfer and resettle residents in affected areas, and to reduce casualties to the greatest extent possible," the president said on authorities have allocated 200 million yuan ($28m; £21m) for recovery efforts, including repairing transportation and other outskirts of Beijing, including the suburban districts of Miyun and Huairou, were hit hardest by the torrential floods have damaged dozens of roads and disrupted power to more than 130 villages. Videos show rescuers wading in chest-deep floodwaters to reach stranded residents, as well as helicopters and drones ferrying food and other aid to the disaster zone. Ms Yang, who works in Hebei province, told BBC Chinese that she was very worried about her family, who live in Miyun district - one of the areas hit hardest by the Sunday she had not been able to contact her parents and grandfather, who all suffer from health problems and have limited mobility. Her family had also been taking care of her pets: eight cats and three village is small and remote, with just around 10 households, she said, adding that she feared rescuers might miss it altogether. Out of desperation, she took to social media to appeal for rescue, hoping they would be found from flood-hit areas recalled how quickly the disaster unfolded. "The flood came rushing in, just like that, so fast and suddenly," Zhuang Zhelin, a shop-owner in Taishitun town, near Beijing, told the Associated Press. "In no time at all, the place was filling up."Zhuang's neighbour told the Associated Press that when the floods came he "just ran upstairs and waited for rescue"."I remember thinking, if no one came to get us, we'd be in real trouble," he is no stranger to flooding, particularly at this time of year. One of the deadliest in recent memory occurred in July 2012, when 190mm of rain drenched the city in a day, killing 79 summer, floods have wreaked havoc across swathes of people were killed and 10 people went missing in Shandong province earlier this month when Typhoon Wipha struck eastern China. Two weeks earlier, a landslide killed three people in Ya'an city, southwestern weather, which experts link to climate change, has increasingly threatened China's residents and economy - especially its trillion-dollar agriculture disasters in the first half of the year have cost China 54.11 billion yuan ($7.5bn; £5.7bn), its emergency management ministry said earlier this month. Flooding accounted for more than 90% of the losses, the ministry noted.