flooding in the southern united states as hurricane ida moves from louisiana into mississippi. the storm brought winds of 150mph as it made landfall yesterday, ripping roofs off buildings. one man was killed when a falling tree hit his house. flash floods have already affected residents of new orleans despite defences being strengthened after hurricane katrina 16 years ago. 0ur correspondent nada tawfik is live there. rescue efforts are now under way. resources are pouring in to help with that, to restore infrastructure, from the federal government to volunteer organisations. most pressing of course is the hundreds of crews, boats and helicopters trying to reach those still trapped in the floods. the governor has warned that as those efforts continue the death toll currently at one could rise. this was the force of ida s winds as it mercilessly pounded louisiana with water. a hospital building filled
and he was saying, you know, what an amazing time he has had out there and how proud he was to represent the country and even prouder when he got a gold medal. there we are, proud parents stephen and jenny kept his small, andrew small s parents. there s a warning of life threatening flooding in the southern united states as hurricane ida moves from louisiana into mississippi. the storm brought winds of 150mph when it made landfall yesterday, ripping rooves from buildings ripping roofs from buildings and killing a man whose house was hit by a falling tree. these are the latest pictures in new orleans of the debris and damage brought by the hurricane. there are reports that flash flooding has trapped residents in their homes there, where defences were strengthened following hurricane katrina 16 years ago.
russia, china having a very similar approach on the first two as us but on the third those countries really don t have a great interest in democracy, human rights, women s rights or participation in the workforce. i think will be more difficult to get conditions based on the human rights aspects that it will on the other two. the human rights aspects that it will on the other two. for your time. there s a warning of life threatening flooding in the southern united states as hurricane ida moves from louisiana into mississippi. the storm brought winds of 150 miles an hour when it made landfall yesterday, ripping roofs from buildings and killing a man whose house was hit by a falling tree. these are the latest pictures in new orleans of the debris and damage brought by the hurricane. there are reports that flash flooding has trapped residents in their homes there, where defences were strengthened following hurricane katrina sixteen years ago. president biden has declared a major disast
made landfall yesterday. long-term care facilities in the u.s. are once again experiencing a rise in covid cases. as part of the push to stop the spread and get more americans vaccinated, the federal government is developing regulations that would require vaccines for all nursing home employees. catie beck explains. reporter: sissy sanders worries day and night that her mother will contract covid in her texas nursing home, where a quarter of staff members are unvaccinated. there s no way you can social distance with a resident. you are changing them. you re feeding them. you re helping them brush their teeth. reporter: over a three-week period, covid cases in nursing homes across the u.s. have skyrocketed 142%. the national staff vaccination rate is 60%. sanders fears lockdowns are next can you go through that again no, i can t go through that again but more importantly, the people who can t go through it again are the residents. reporter: president
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