Tuesday, July 8, 2025 - The de@th toll from flash floods in central Texas has risen to more than 100 people, with 11 individuals still reported missing, including 10 girls and a counselor from Camp Mystic.
The floods struck on Friday, causing widespread destruction
and chaos in the Texas Hill Country.
Search and rescue teams are wading through mud-piled
riverbanks as more rain and thunderstorms threaten the region, but hope was
fading of finding any more survivors four days after the catastrophe.
Camp Mystic, a Christian all-girls' summer camp, confirmed at least 27 girls and staff were among the dead. Ten girls and a camp counsellor are still missing.
The White House meanwhile rejected suggestions that budget
cuts at the National Weather Service (NWS) could have inhibited the disaster
response.
At least 84 of the victims, 56 adults, and 28 children d!ed
in Kerr County, where the Guadalupe River was swollen by torrential downpours
before daybreak on Friday, the July Fourth public holiday.
Some 22 adults and 10 children have yet to be identified,
said the county sheriff's office.
Camp Mystic said in a statement on Monday: "Our hearts
are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable
tragedy."
Richard Eastland, 70, the co-owner and director of Camp
Mystic, d!ed trying to save the children, the Austin American-Statesman
reported.
Local pastor Del Way, who knows the Eastland family, told the BBC: "The whole community will miss him [Mr Eastland]. He d!ed a hero."
In its latest forecast, the NWS has predicted more
slow-moving thunderstorms, potentially bringing more flash flooding to the
region.
Critics of the Trump administration have linked the disaster
to thousands of job cuts at the NWS' parent agency, the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
The NWS office responsible for forecasting in the region had
five employees on duty as thunderstorms brewed over Texas on Thursday evening,
the usual number for an overnight shift when severe weather is expected.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt rejected
attempts to blame the president.
"That was an act of God," she told a daily
briefing on Monday.
"It's not the administration's fault that the flood-hit when it did, but there were early and consistent warnings and, again, the National Weather Service did its job."
She outlined that the NWS office in Austin-San Antonio
conducted briefings for local officials on the eve of the flood and sent out a
flood watch that afternoon, before issuing numerous flood warnings that night
and in the pre-dawn hours of 4 July.
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